perkeep/doc/protocol/blob-upload-protocol.txt

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Uploading a single blob is done in two parts:
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1) Optional: see if the server already has it with a HEAD request to
its blob URL, or do a multi-stat request with a single blob. If the
server has it, you're done. Blobs are content-addressable and have
no metadata or version, so if the server has it, it has the right
version.
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2) PUT that blob to its blob URL (or do a multipart batch put of a
single blob)
When uploading multiple blobs (the common case), the fastest option
depends on whether or not you're using a modern HTTP transport
(e.g. SPDY). If your client and server don't support SPDY, you want
to use the batch stat and batch upload endpoints, which hopefully can
die when the future finishes arriving.
If you have SPDY, uploading 100 blobs is just like uploading 100
single blobs, but all at once. Send all your 100 HEAD requests at
once, wait 1 RTT for all 100 replies, and then send then the <= 100
PUT requests with the blobs that the server didn't have.
If you DON'T have SPDY on both sides, you want to use the batch stat
and batch upload endpoints, described below.
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============================================================================
Preupload request:
============================================================================
(see blob-stat-protocol.txt)
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============================================================================
Batch upload request:
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============================================================================
Things to note about the request:
* You do a POST to $BLOB_ROOT/camli/upload where $BLOB_ROOT is the
blobserver's root path. You can get the path from
performing "discovery" on the server and getting the
"blobRoot" value. See discovery.txt.
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* You MUST provide a "name" parameter in each multipart part's
Content-Disposition value. The part's name matters and is the
blobref ("digest-hexhexhexhex") of your blob. The bytes MUST
match the blobref and the server MUST reject it if they don't
match.
* You (currently) MUST provide a Content-Type for each multipart
part. It doesn't matter what it is (it's thrown away), but it's
necessary to satisfy various HTTP libraries. Easiest is to just
set it to "application/octet-stream" Server implementions SHOULD
fail if you clients forget it, to encourage clients to remember
it for compatibility with all blob servers.
* You (currently) MUST provide a "filename" parameter in each
multipart's Content-Disposition value, unique per blob, but it
will also be thrown away and exists purely to satisfy various
HTTP libraries (mostly App Engine). It's recommended to either
set this to an increasing number (e.g. "blob1", "blob2") or just
repeat the blobref value here.
* The total size of a batch upload HTTP request, including headers
and body (including MIME bits) should not exceed 32 MB. (A
single blob can be at most 16 MB, but will in practice be much
smaller: claims will be at most ~1 KB, and file chunks are
typically at most 64 KB or 256 KB)
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Some of these requirements may be relaxed in the future.
Example:
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POST /$BLOB_SERVER_PATH_ROOT/camli/upload HTTP/1.1
Host: upload-server.example.com
Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=randomboundaryXYZ
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--randomboundaryXYZ
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Content-Disposition: form-data; name="sha1-9b03f7aca1ac60d40b5e570c34f79a3e07c918e8"; filename="blob1"
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Content-Type: application/octet-stream
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(binary or text blob data)
--randomboundaryXYZ
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Content-Disposition: form-data; name="sha1-deadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeef"; filename="blob2"
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Content-Type: application/octet-stream
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(binary or text blob data)
--randomboundaryXYZ--
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-----------------------------------------------------
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Response (status may be a 200 or a 303 to this data)
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-----------------------------------------------------
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HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/plain
{
"received": [
{"blobRef": "sha1-9b03f7aca1ac60d40b5e570c34f79a3e07c918e8",
"size": 12312},
{"blobRef": "sha1-deadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeef",
"size": 29384933}
]
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}
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Response keys:
received required Array of {"blobRef": BLOBREF, "size": INT_bytes}
for blobs that were successfully saved. Empty
list in the case nothing was received.
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errorText optional String error message for protocol errors
not relating to a particular blob.
Mostly for debugging clients.
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If connection drops during a POST to an upload URL, you should re-do a
stat request to verify which objects were received by the server
and which were not. Also, the URL you received from stat before
might no longer work, so stat is required to a get a valid upload
URL.
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For information on resuming truncated uploads, read blob-upload-resume.txt
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