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| This is a set of console utilities that are available on all UMIACS-supported machines. They are provided to support our Ceph Object Stores so that our users may interact with them on the command line. In addition, each Ceph Object Store in UMIACS has a fully-functional web application that allows access to your storage from a web browser.
| | The UMobj suite of utilities provide command-line access to the [https://obj.umiacs.umd.edu/obj UMIACS Object Store]. UMobj is preinstalled on all UMIACS-supported RHEL8 machines. For other operating systems or non UMIACS-supported hosts, we encourage use of one of the many [[S3Clients#Command_Line_Clients | third-party command line clients]] that exist. |
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| For UMIACS-supported machines, these utilities are installed at <code>/opt/UMobj/bin</code>; however, they should already be available in your PATH.
| | ==When to use UMobj== |
| | Use umobj if: |
| | * you have a large number of files to upload (hundreds or thousands of files) |
| | * you are uploading large files (files greater than 4GB in size) |
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| ==Prerequisites== | | ==Setup== |
| | We highly recommend setting a few environmental variables containing your credentials for |
| | convenience. When logged into the Object Store web interface (see list above), you can |
| | find these credentials on the user page. E.g. https://obj.umiacs.umd.edu/obj/user/ |
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| To use any of these utilities you either have to pass in your access and secret keys on the command line or you need to set some appropriate environmental variables. You can obtain your access and secret keys (which are different from your username and password) by visiting the appropriate Ceph Object Store. The default store is https://obj.umiacs.umd.edu/UMobjstore/.
| | For example, if you use the <tt>bash</tt> shell, you can add something like the following to your |
| | | <tt>.bashrc</tt> or <tt>.bash_profile</tt>. |
| Your access and secret keys for that Ceph Object Store will be displayed upon first login or subsequently by visiting https://obj.umiacs.umd.edu/UMobjstore/user. You can then set, for example, in bash the following environment variables:
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| export OBJ_ACCESS_KEY_ID="31sdfadDFAHFDN+344qOEIS"
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| export OBJ_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="NDSMK3233adfahadflkkPDSH092DSJKDKDJKFDLSFLNK"
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| If you are not using the default Ceph Object Store you can tell the utilities to use an alternative server.
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| | |
| export OBJ_SERVER="gembox.cbcb.umd.edu"
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| You can optionally pass the <code>--access_key</code>, <code>--secret_key</code> and <code>--server</code> switches to the utilities.
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| ==lsobj==
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| | |
| To list buckets and keys in the Object Store you can use the <b>lsobj</b> command. If given without an argument it will list your buckets. (this will only list buckets that you created)
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| <pre> | |
| $ lsobj
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| bob
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| test
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| zeta
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| </pre> | |
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| You can then give it a bucket to list the contents within the bucket. If you were granted access to a bucket that you didn't create you can also use it this command. This will list all the keys in your bucket, which can take a long time.
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| <pre> | | <pre> |
| $ lsobj test
| | export OBJ_ACCESS_KEY_ID="<ACCESS_KEY>" |
| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:25:09.000Z 1.8 KB UMIACSCA.pem
| | export OBJ_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="<SECRET_KEY>" |
| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:25:24.000Z 311.4 KB cover.jpg
| | export OBJ_SERVER="obj.umiacs.umd.edu" |
| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:27:39.000Z 0.0 b foo/
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:27:40.000Z 0.0 b foo/bar
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:25:32.000Z 31.8 KB screenshot.jpg
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:26:48.000Z 8.3 KB thunderbird.xpm
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| ================================================================================
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| TOTAL: 353.3 KB 6 Files
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| </pre> | | </pre> |
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| ===Directories===
| | Or, in tcsh, you can do the following or add it into your <tt>.tcshrc</tt>. |
| In an object store there are only buckets and keys (key=value store). This means that your traditional posix directory structure is only emulated using the UNIX "<b>/</b>" character within key names. Any key in the bucket ending in a / will be interpreted by the <code>lsobj</code>utility and website as a directory. You can also list only subdirectories with the <code>lsobj</code> utility.
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| <pre> | | <pre> |
| $ lsobj test:foo/
| | setenv OBJ_ACCESS_KEY_ID "<ACCESS_KEY>" |
| foo/
| | setenv OBJ_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY "<SECRET_KEY>" |
| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:27:39.000Z 0.0 b foo/
| | setenv OBJ_SERVER "obj.umiacs.umd.edu" |
| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:27:40.000Z 0.0 b foo/bar
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| ================================================================================
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| TOTAL: 0.0 b 2 Files
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| </pre> | | </pre> |
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| ==mkobj==
| | (substituting in your actual <ACCESS_KEY> and <SECRET_KEY> for your personal account or [[OBJ#LabGroups | LabGroup]] in the [https://obj.umiacs.umd.edu/obj/user/ Object Store]). |
| mkobj creates buckets and directories in the Object Store. <b>Please note that bucket names are unique in the Object Store, so you may very well get an error back that the name has already been used.</b>
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| <pre>
| | ==Detailed Usage== |
| $ mkobj foo
| | For an example of how to use UMobj, please see [[UMobj/Example]]. |
| Created bucket foo.
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| $ lsobj
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| bob
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| foo
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| test
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| zeta
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| </pre>
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| You can also create directories within your buckets to provide a way to group your data.
| | For complete usage information, please see the [[GitLab]] page for [https://gitlab.umiacs.umd.edu/staff/umobj/blob/master/README.md#umobj umobj]. |
| | |
| <pre>
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| % mkobj foo:bar/
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| % lsobj foo
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:38:38.000Z 0.0 b bar/
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| ================================================================================
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| TOTAL: 0.0 b 1 Files
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| </pre>
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| | |
| ==cpobj==
| |
| Copying files to the Object Store can be done per-file or recursively both to and from the Object Store.
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| | |
| To copy a single file to the Object Store you can use <code>cpobj</code> and specify a bucket with a trailing <code>:</code> (with an optional additional path).
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| | |
| <pre>
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| % cpobj test.png foo:
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| 100% |##############################################################################################|
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| % lsobj foo
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-04T15:38:38.000Z 0.0 b bar/
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-07T20:06:48.000Z 18.3 KB test.png
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| ================================================================================
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| TOTAL: 18.3 KB 2 Files
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| </pre>
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| To copy a directory of files you will need to use the <code>-r</code> or <code>--recursive</code> flags.
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| | |
| <pre>
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| % lsobj foo
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| ================================================================================
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| TOTAL: 0.0 b 0 Files
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| % cpobj -r /tmp/stuff foo:stuff
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| 100% |##############################################################################################|
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| 100% |##############################################################################################|
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| 100% |##############################################################################################|
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| % lsobj foo
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-08T00:13:52.000Z 0.0 b stuff/
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-08T00:13:55.000Z 26.0 KB stuff/WindowsSecurity.png
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-08T00:13:54.000Z 226.5 KB stuff/changepass.tiff
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-08T00:13:55.000Z 18.3 KB stuff/test.png
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| ================================================================================
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| TOTAL: 270.8 KB 9 Files
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| </pre>
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| | |
| ==rmobj==
| |
| You can delete your buckets and keys with rmobj. It can take a bucket and work recursively asking you to delete all the files and the bucket itself. It can also just delete specific file(s) in a bucket when given on the command line.
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| | |
| <pre>
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| % rmobj -r foo
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| Are you sure you want to remove all the contents of the bucket foo [yes/no] : yes
| |
| Do you want to remove the bucket foo [yes/no] : no
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| </pre>
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| | |
| <pre>
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| % lsobj foo
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-09T18:44:20.000Z 1.0 KB setup.cfg
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-09T18:44:17.000Z 781.0 b setup.py
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-09T18:44:09.000Z 289.0 b test-requirements.txt
| |
| ================================================================================
| |
| TOTAL: 2.0 KB 3 Files
| |
| % rmobj foo:setup.cfg foo:setup.py
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| % lsobj foo
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| -rwx--- 2013-10-09T18:44:09.000Z 289.0 b test-requirements.txt
| |
| ================================================================================
| |
| TOTAL: 289.0 b 1 Files
| |
| </pre>
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| | |
| ==chobj==
| |
| You can change the ACL on a specific key(s) and specify multiple canned ACL policies in a single command.
| |
| | |
| <pre>
| |
| % chobj -p liam:FULL_CONTROL foo:test-requirements.txt</pre>
| |
The UMobj suite of utilities provide command-line access to the UMIACS Object Store. UMobj is preinstalled on all UMIACS-supported RHEL8 machines. For other operating systems or non UMIACS-supported hosts, we encourage use of one of the many third-party command line clients that exist.
When to use UMobj
Use umobj if:
- you have a large number of files to upload (hundreds or thousands of files)
- you are uploading large files (files greater than 4GB in size)
Setup
We highly recommend setting a few environmental variables containing your credentials for
convenience. When logged into the Object Store web interface (see list above), you can
find these credentials on the user page. E.g. https://obj.umiacs.umd.edu/obj/user/
For example, if you use the bash shell, you can add something like the following to your
.bashrc or .bash_profile.
export OBJ_ACCESS_KEY_ID="<ACCESS_KEY>"
export OBJ_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="<SECRET_KEY>"
export OBJ_SERVER="obj.umiacs.umd.edu"
Or, in tcsh, you can do the following or add it into your .tcshrc.
setenv OBJ_ACCESS_KEY_ID "<ACCESS_KEY>"
setenv OBJ_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY "<SECRET_KEY>"
setenv OBJ_SERVER "obj.umiacs.umd.edu"
(substituting in your actual <ACCESS_KEY> and <SECRET_KEY> for your personal account or LabGroup in the Object Store).
Detailed Usage
For an example of how to use UMobj, please see UMobj/Example.
For complete usage information, please see the GitLab page for umobj.