• cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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    9 hours ago

    S3 compatibility is nice I guess if you need S3 compatibility but also… why would you need that?

    sshfs does everything I need and compatibility is almost native.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      42 minutes ago

      SSHFS is very unreliable. At least use NFSv4 or even SMB/CIFS.

      • cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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        5 hours ago

        So enlighten me then, save me from my terrible hack that is working fine for me and tell me what it DOES have to do with. I thought S3 was a remote filesystem you can use, essentially Amazon’s proprietary version of webdav where you get a http bucket you can only access with aws proprietary tools. What’s the attraction? Clearly it seems like people love it, and I am getting dunked on for asking an honest question, which feels a bit unhealthy and unpleasant for the self-hosting community.

        Am I supposed to be familiar with AWS infrastructure as a prerequisite for being here?

        • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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          4 minutes ago

          S3 is designed for being used by applications via API, for example you can easily save and retrieve files from it even with a JavaScript application. It is much more difficult to do the same with sshfs

          If instead you use it mounted on a computer, S3 is worse because each time you need to list its contents that’s an API request, if you have hundreds of thousands of files then it’s thousands of API reuqests

        • Eager Eagle@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          ok, to start with, if you need a POSIX interface to the filesystem, you already have an SSH connection to that server, and don’t need much stability across multiple clients, SSHFS may do just fine. For a homelab, that is likely the case.

          now, if you’re hosting a web server that needs data distributed across drives/nodes, data redundancy, and the usage is primarily programmatic, closer to a CDN’s or machine learning pipeline than a single user browsing files; then you want an S3-compatible solution. The S3 API makes it easier to plug it into your application, while allowing you to migrate to a different one - which I’m actually currently doing for a MinIO deployment at work.