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- # Name of snap as registered in the store
- name: seaweedfs
- # Automatically derive snap version from git tags
- version: git
- # Short human readable name as seen in 'snap find $SNAPNAME'
- summary: SeaweedFS
- # Longer multi-line description found in 'snap info $SNAPNAME'
- description: |
- SeaweedFS is a simple and highly scalable distributed file system,
- to store and serve billions of files fast!
- SeaweedFS implements an object store with O(1) disk seek,
- transparent cloud integration, and an optional Filer with POSIX interface,
- supporting S3 API, Rack-Aware Erasure Coding for warm storage,
- FUSE mount, Hadoop compatible, WebDAV.
- # Grade is stable for snaps expected to land in the stable channel
- grade: stable
- # Uses the strict confinement model and uses interfaces to open up access to
- # resources on the target host
- confinement: strict
- # List of parts which comprise the snap
- parts:
- # The main part which defines how to build the application in the snap
- seaweedfs:
- # This part needs a newer version of golang, so we use a separate part
- # which defines how to get a newer golang during the build
- after: [go]
- # The go plugin knows how to build go applications into a snap
- plugin: go
- # Snapcraft will look in this location for the source of the application
- source: .
- go-importpath: github.com/chrislusf/seaweedfs
- go:
- # Defines the version of golang which will be bootstrapped into the snap
- source-tag: go1.14
- # Apps exposes the binaries inside the snap to the host system once installed
- apps:
- # We expose the weed command.
- # This differs from the snap name, so it will be namespaced as seaweedfs.weed
- # An alias can be added to expose this as 'weed' if requested in the snapcraft forum
- weed:
- # The path to the binary inside the snap, relative to the $SNAP home
- command: bin/weed
- # Plugs connect the snap to resources on the host system. We enable network connectivity
- # We also add home and removable-media (latter not autoconnected by default)
- # so users can access files in their home or on removable disks
- plugs:
- - network
- - network-bind
- - home
- - removable-media
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