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NAME
smugfs - file system access to SmugMug photo sharing
SYNOPSIS
smugfs [ -DFH ] [ -k keypattern ] [ -m mtpt ] [ -s srvname ]
DESCRIPTION
Smugfs is a user-level file system that provides access to
images stored on the SmugMug photo sharing service. It logs
in after obtaining a password from factotum(4) using
server=smugmug.com and keypattern (if any) as key criteria
(see auth(3)). Then smugfs serves a virtual directory tree
mounted at mtpt (default /n/smug) and posted at srvname , if
the -s option is given.
The directory tree is arranged in five levels: root, user,
category, album, and image. For example, /n/smug/cmac/ is a
user directory, /n/smug/cmac/People/ is a category direc-
tory, /n/smug/cmac/People/Friends/ is an album directory,
and /n/smug/cmac/albums/Friends/2631/ is an image directory.
SmugMug allows fine-grained classification via subcate-
gories, but subcategories are not yet implemented.
All directories contain a special control file named ctl;
text commands written to ctl change smugfs's behavior or
implement functionality that does not fit nicely into the
file system interface.
Smugfs caches information about users, categories, albums,
and images. If changes are made outside of smugfs (for
example, using a web browser), the cache may need to be dis-
carded. Writing the string sync to a directory's ctl file
causes smugfs to discard all cached information used to pre-
sent that directory and its children. Thus, writing sync to
the root ctl file discards all of smugfs 's cached informa-
tion.
Root directory
The root directory contains directories named after users.
By default, it contains only a directory for the logged-in
user, but other directories will be created as needed to
satisfy directory lookups.
In addition to user directories, the root directory contains
three special files: ctl, rpclog, and uploads. Reading
rpclog returns a list of recent RPCs issued to the SmugMug
API server. Reads at the end of the file block until a new
RPC is issued. The uploads file lists the file upload queue
(q.v.).
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User directories
User directories contain category directories named after
the categories. SmugMug pre-defines a variety of cate-
gories, so it is common to have many categories that do not
contain albums.
In a user directory, creating a new directory creates a new
category on SmugMug. Similarly, renaming or removing a cat-
egory directory renames or removes the category on SmugMug.
Categories cannot be removed if they contain albums.
User directories also contain a directory named albums that
itself contains all of that user's albums.
Category directories
Each category directory contains album directories named
using the album's title.
In a category directory, creating a new directory creates a
new album on SmugMug. Similarly, renaming or removing an
album directory renames or removes the album on SmugMug.
Albums cannot be removed if they contain images.
Album directories
Each album directory contains image directories named using
the image's decimal SmugMug ID. Image directories cannot be
created or renamed, but they can be removed. Removing an
image directory removes the image from the album on SmugMug.
Album directories also contain three special files, ctl,
settings, and url.
The settings file contains the album settings in textual
form, one setting per line. Each line represents a single
setting and is formatted as an alphabetic setting name fol-
lowed by a single tab followed by the value. Many settings
can be changed by writing new setting lines, in the same
format, to the settings file.
Copying a file into the album directory queues it for
uploading to SmugMug to be added to the album. Files disap-
pear from the album directory once they have finished
uploading, replaced by new image directories. The uploads
file in the root directory lists all pending uploads, which
are stored temporarily in /var/tmp.
Image directories
Each image directory contains an image file, named with its
original name, if available. If the image belongs to
another user, SmugMug does not expose the original name, so
the file is named nnnn.jpg, where nnnn is the SmugMug image
ID number. The file content is the original image or else
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the largest image available.
The directory contains a settings file holding per-image
settings, similar to the file in the album directory; and a
url file, containing URLs to the various sized images on the
SmugMug server.
EXAMPLES
Mount smugfs on /n/smug; the current user must have write
access to /n/smug and /dev/fuse.
% smugfs
Watch API calls as they execute:
% cat /n/smug/rpclog &
Create a new album in the Vacation category and fill it
with photos:
% mkdir /n/smug/you/Vacation/Summer
% cp *.jpg /n/smug/you/Vacation/Summer
The photos are now uploading in the background. Wait for
the uploads to finish:
% while(test -s /n/smug/uploads) sleep 60
Make the album publicly viewable and share it.
% echo public 1 >/n/smug/you/Vacation/Summer/settings
% cat /n/smug/you/Vacation/Summer/url | mail friends
SOURCE
/usr/local/plan9/src/cmd/smugfs
SEE ALSO
SmugMug, http://smugmug.com/
BUGS
If multiple categories or albums have the same name, only
one will be accessible via the file system interface.
Renaming the accessible one via Unix's mv(1) will resolve
the problem.
Boolean values appear as true and false in settings files
but must be changed using 1 and 0.
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