Wasm WNFS
This projects implements necessary JavaScript bindings for using the WebNative FileSystem (WNFS) Rust implementation in the browser.
WNFS is a versioned content-addressable distributed filesystem with private and public sub systems. The private filesystem is encrypted so that only users with the right keys can access its contents. It is designed to prevent inferring metadata like the structure of the file tree. The other part of the WNFS filesystem is a simpler public filesystem that is not encrypted and can be accessed by anyone with the right address.
WNFS also features collaborative editing of file trees, where multiple users can edit the same tree at the same time.
WNFS file trees can serialize and be deserialized from IPLD graphs with an extensible metadata section. This allows WNFS to be understood by other IPLD-based tools and systems.
Outline
Setting up the Project
Usage
WNFS does not have an opinion on where you want to persist your content or the file tree. Instead, the API expects any object that implements the async BlockStore
interface. This implementation also defers system-level operations to the user; requiring that operations like time and random number generation be passed in from the interface. This makes for a clean wasm interface that works everywhere.
Let's see an example of working with a public directory. Here we are going to use a custom-written memory-based blockstore.
import { MemoryBlockStore } from "<custom>";
import { PublicDirectory } from "wnfs";
const dir = new PublicDirectory(new Date());
const store = new MemoryBlockStore();
var { rootDir } = await dir.mkdir(["pictures", "cats"], new Date(), store);
const cid = Uint8Array.from([
1, 112, 18, 32, 195, 196, 115, 62, 200, 175, 253, 6, 207, 158, 159, 245, 15,
252, 107, 205, 46, 200, 90, 97, 112, 0, 75, 183, 9, 102, 156, 49, 222, 148,
57, 26,
]);
var { rootDir } = await rootDir.write(
["pictures", "cats", "tabby.png"],
cid,
time,
store
);
var { rootDir } = await rootDir.write(
["pictures", "dogs", "billie.jpeg"],
cid,
time,
store
);
var { rootDir } = await rootDir.rm(["pictures", "cats"], store);
var { result } = await rootDir.ls(["pictures"], store);
console.log("Files in /pictures directory:", result);
You may notice that we use the rootDir
s returned by each operation in subseqent operations. That is because WNFS internal state is immutable and every operation potentially returns a new root directory. This allows us to track and rollback changes when needed. It also makes collaborative editing easier to implement and reason about. There is a basic demo of the filesystem immutability here.
The private filesystem, on the other hand, is a bit more involved. Hash Array Mapped Trie (HAMT) is used as the intermediate format of private file tree before it is persisted to the blockstore. Our use of HAMTs obfuscate the file tree hierarchy.
import { MemoryBlockStore, Rng } from "<custom>";
import { PrivateDirectory, PrivateForest, Namefilter } from "wnfs";
const initialForest = new PrivateForest();
const rng = new Rng();
const store = new MemoryBlockStore();
const dir = new PrivateDirectory(new Namefilter(), new Date(), rng);
var { rootDir, forest } = await root.mkdir(
["pictures", "cats"],
true,
new Date(),
initialForest,
store,
rng
);
var { rootDir, forest } = await rootDir.write(
["pictures", "cats", "tabby.png"],
cid,
time,
store
);
var { rootDir, forest } = await rootDir.write(
["pictures", "cats", "billie.png"],
true,
new Uint8Array([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]),
new Date(),
forest,
store,
rng
);
var { rootDir, forest } = await rootDir.rm(
["pictures", "cats"],
true,
forest,
store,
rng
);
var { result } = await rootDir.ls(["pictures"], true, forest, store);
console.log("Files in /pictures directory:", result);
Testing the Project
-
Run tests
yarn playwright test
Publishing Package