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FUSE / Dokany driver to mount remote file systems by using remotefs

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remotefs-fuse

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~ A FUSE Driver for remotefs-rs ~

Developed by @veeso

Current version: 0.1.0

License-MIT Repo stars Downloads counter Latest version Ko-fi

Linux CI MacOS CI Windows CI Docs


Get started

First of all you need to add remotefs-fuse to your project dependencies:

remotefs-fuse = "^0.1.0"

these features are supported:

  • no-log: disable logging. By default, this library will log via the log crate.

Example

use remotefs_fuse::Mount;

let options = vec![
    #[cfg(unix)]
    remotefs_fuse::MountOption::AllowRoot,
    #[cfg(unix)]
    remotefs_fuse::MountOption::RW,
    #[cfg(unix)]
    remotefs_fuse::MountOption::Exec,
    #[cfg(unix)]
    remotefs_fuse::MountOption::Sync,
    #[cfg(unix)]
    remotefs_fuse::MountOption::FSName(volume),
];

let remote = MyRemoteFsImpl::new();
let mount_path = std::path::PathBuf::from("/mnt/remote");
let mut mount = Mount::mount(remote, &mount_path, &options).expect("Failed to mount");
let mut umount = mount.unmounter();

// setup signal handler
ctrlc::set_handler(move || {
    umount.unmount().expect("Failed to unmount");
})?;

mount.run().expect("Failed to run filesystem event loop");

Requirements

  • Linux: you need to have fuse3 installed on your system.

    Of course, you also need to have the FUSE kernel module installed. To build remotefs-fuse on Linux, you need to have the libfuse3 development package installed.

    In Ubuntu, you can install it with:

    sudo apt-get install fuse3 libfuse3-dev

    In CentOS, you can install it with:

    sudo yum install fuse-devel
  • macOS: you need to have the macfuse service installed on your system.

    You can install it with:

    brew install macfuse
  • Windows: you need to have the dokany service installed on your system.

    You can install it from https://github.com/dokan-dev/dokany?tab=readme-ov-file#installation

CLI Tool

remotefs-fuse comes with a CLI tool remotefs-fuse-cli to mount remote file systems with FUSE or Dokany.

cargo install remotefs-fuse-cli

Features

remotefs-fuse-cli can be built with the features below; each feature enables a different file transfer protocol

  • aws-s3
  • ftp
  • kube
  • smb: requires libsmbclient on MacOS and GNU/Linux systems
  • ssh (enables both sftp and scp); requires libssh2 on MacOS and GNU/Linux systems
  • webdav

All the features are enabled by default; so if you want to build it with only certain features, pass the --no-default-features option.

Usage

remotefs-fuse-cli -o opt1 -o opt2=abc --to /mnt/to --volume <volume-name> <aws-s3|ftp|kube|smb|scp|sftp|webdav> [protocol-options...]

On Windows the mountpoint can be specified simply using the drive letter --to M will mount the FS to M:\

where protocol options are

  • aws-s3
    • --bucket <name>
    • --region <region> (optional)
    • --endpoint <endpoint_url> (optional)
    • --profile <profile_name> (optional)
    • --access-key <access_key> (optional)
    • --security-token <security_access_token> (optional)
    • --new-path-style use new path style
  • ftp
    • --hostname <host>
    • --port <port> (default 21)
    • --username <username> (default: anonymous)
    • --password <password> (optional)
    • --secure specify it if you want to use FTPS
    • --active specify it if you want to use ACTIVE mode
  • kube
    • --namespace <namespace> (default: default)
    • --cluster-url <url>
  • memory: runs a virtual file system in memory
  • smb
    • --address <address>
    • --port <port> (default: 139; Linux/Mac only)
    • --share <share_name>
    • --username <username> (optional)
    • --password <password> (optional)
    • --workgroup <workgroup> (optional; Linux/Mac only)
  • scp / sftp
    • --hostname <hostname>
    • --port <port> (default 22)
    • --username <username>
    • --password <password>
  • webdav
    • --url <url>
    • --username <username>
    • --password <password>

Other options are:

  • --uid <uid>: specify the UID to overwrite when mounting the remote fs. See UID and GID override.
  • --gid <gid>: specify the GID to overwrite when mounting the remote fs. See UID and GID override.
  • --default-mode <mode>: set the default file mode to use when the remote fs doesn't support it.

Mount options can be viewed in the docs at https://docs.rs/remotefs-fuse/latest/remotefs-fuse/enum.MountOption.html.

UID and GID override

❗ This doesn't apply to Windows.

The possibility to override UID and GID is used because sometimes this scenario can happen:

  1. my UID is 1000
  2. I'm mounting for instance a SFTP file system and the remote user I used to sign in has UID 1002
  3. I'm unable to operate on the file system because UID 1000 can't operate to files owned by 1002

But of course this doesn't make sense: I signed in with user who owns those files, so I should be able to operate on them. That's why I've added Uid and Gid into the MountOption variant.

Setting the Uid option to 1002 you'll be able to operate on the File system as it should.

Project stability

Please consider this is an early-stage project and I haven't heavily tested it, in particular the Windows version.

I suggest you to first test it on test filesystems to see whether the library behaves correctly with your system.

Changelog ⏳

View remotefs-fuse`s changelog HERE


License 📃

remotefs-fuse is licensed under the MIT license.

You can read the entire license HERE

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