John Dickinson 16ecc430ca Better RFC support for OPTIONS and CORS preflight requests
Ensures that the Allow header is set for 405 responses from the proxy,
as per RFC 2616.

CORS preflight requests now require both the Origin and Access-
Control-Request-Method headers to get a successful (200) response. The
draft spec defines errors as a response with a non-200 status code.
This patch sets the CORS error response code to 401 (Not Authorized).
A later patch may choose to make this configurable.

There is some ambiguity between RFC 2616 and the CORS draft spec
around what to do when a CORS request is made but the cluster has no
CORS information about the requested resource. This patch chooses to
return an error in this case because it is what would be simplest for
CORS client apps.

Further improvements to the OPTIONS verb not included in this patch
 include support of more top-level resources (eg / or /v1/) or
sending the configured constraints in the reponse body.

Change-Id: I40be059e8bbf3737dafc4e6fefa7598d05669c60
2012-11-05 20:15:21 -08:00
2012-10-23 14:48:59 -05:00
2012-10-18 12:37:50 -07:00
2010-07-12 17:03:45 -05:00
2012-09-14 20:42:05 -04:00
2012-09-13 20:59:41 -07:00

Swift

A distributed object storage system designed to scale from a single machine to thousands of servers. Swift is optimized for multi-tenancy and high concurrency. Swift is ideal for backups, web and mobile content, and any other unstructured data that can grow without bound.

Swift provides a simple, REST-based API fully documented at http://doc.openstack.org/.

Swift was originally developed as the basis for Rackspace's Cloud Files and was open-sourced in 2010 as part of the OpenStack project. It has since grown to include contributions from many companies and has spawned a thriving ecosystem of 3rd party tools. Swift's contributors are listed in the AUTHORS file.

Docs

To build documentation install sphinx (pip install sphinx), run python setup.py build_sphinx, and then browse to /doc/build/html/index.html. These docs are auto-generated after every commit and available online at http://docs.openstack.org/developer/swift/.

For Developers

The best place to get started is the "SAIO - Swift All In One". This document will walk you through setting up a development cluster of Swift in a VM. The SAIO environment is ideal for running small-scale tests against swift and trying out new features and bug fixes.

You can run unit tests with .unittests and functional tests with .functests.

Code Organization

  • bin/: Executable scripts that are the processes run by the deployer
  • doc/: Documentation
  • etc/: Sample config files
  • swift/: Core code
    • account/: account server
    • common/: code shared by different modules
      • middleware/: "standard", officially-supported middleware
      • ring/: code implementing Swift's ring
    • container/: container server
    • obj/: object server
    • proxy/: proxy server
  • test/: Unit and functional tests

Data Flow

Swift is a WSGI application and uses eventlet's WSGI server. After the processes are running, the entry point for new requests is the Application class in swift/proxy/server.py. From there, a controller is chosen, and the request is processed. The proxy may choose to forward the request to a back- end server. For example, the entry point for requests to the object server is the ObjectController class in swift/obj/server.py.

For Deployers

Deployer docs are also available at http://docs.openstack.org/developer/swift/. A good starting point is at http://docs.openstack.org/developer/swift/deployment_guide.html

You can run functional tests against a swift cluster with .functests. These functional tests require /etc/swift/test.conf to run. A sample config file can be found in this source tree in test/sample.conf.

For Client Apps

For client applications, official Python language bindings are provided at http://github.com/openstack/python-swiftclient.

Complete API documentation at http://docs.openstack.org/api/openstack-object-storage/1.0/content/


For more information come hang out in #openstack-swift on freenode.

Thanks,

The Swift Development Team

Description
OpenStack Storage (Swift)
Readme 197 MiB
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JavaScript 0.3%