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Storage write and read
Once a user authenticates and a DApp obtains authentication, the application interacts with Gaia through the blockstack.js library. There are two simple methods for working with data in Gaia hub: the putFile()
and getFile()
methods. This section goes into greater detail about the methods, how they interact with a hub, and how to use them.
Write-to and Read-from URL Guarantees
Gaia is built on a driver model that supports many storage services. So, with
very few lines of code, you can interact with providers on Amazon S3, Dropbox,
and so forth. The simple getFile
and putFile
interfaces are kept simple
because Blockstack assumes and wants to encourage a community of
open-source-data-management libraries.
The performance and simplicity-oriented guarantee of the Gaia specification is
that when an application submits a write-to
https://myhub.service.org/store/foo/bar
URL, the application is guaranteed to
be able to read from the https://myreads.com/foo/bar
URL. Note that, while the
prefix in the write-to url (for example,myhub.service.org/store
) and the read-from URL
(https://myreads.com
) are different, the foo/bar
suffixes are the same.
Consistent, identical suffixes allow an application to know exactly where a
written file can be read from, given the read prefix. The Gaia service defines a hub_info
endpoint to obtain that read prefix:
GET /hub_info/
The endpoint returns a JSON object with a read_url_prefix
, for example, if my service returns:
{ ...,
"read_url_prefix": "https://myservice.org/read/"
}
The data be read with this getFile()
and this address:
https://myservice.org/read/1DHvWDj834zPAkwMhpXdYbCYh4PomwQfzz/0/profile.json
The application is guaranteed that the profile is written with putFile()
this request address:
https://myservice.org/store/1DHvWDj834zPAkwMhpXdYbCYh4PomwQfzz/0/profile.json
When you use the putFile()
method it takes the user data and POSTs it to the user's Gaia storage hub. The data POSTs directly to the hub, the blockchain is not used and no data is stored there. The limit on file upload is currently 25mb.
Address-based access-control
Access control in a Gaia storage hub is performed on a per-address basis.
Writes to URLs /store/<address>/<file>
are allowed only if the writer can
demonstrate that they control that address. This is achieved via the
authentication token which is a message signed by the private key associated
with that address. The message itself is a challenge text, returned via the
/hub_info/
endpoint.