pict-rs/README.md

50 KiB

pict-rs

a simple image hosting service

Navigation

  1. Links
  2. Usage
    1. Running
      1. Commandline
      2. Docker
      3. Bare Metal
        1. Distro Package
        2. Binary Download
        3. Compile from Source
        4. Nix
    2. Api
  3. Administration
    1. Backups
    2. 0.4 to 0.5 Migration Guide
      1. Overview
      2. Upgrade Configuration
      3. Configuration Updates
        1. Image Changes
        2. Animation Changes
        3. Video Changes
      4. Upgrading Directly to Postgres
    3. Filesystem to Object Storage Migration
      1. Troubleshooting
    4. Sled to Postgres Migration
  4. Development
    1. Nix Development
      1. With direnv and nix-direnv
      2. With just Nix
    2. Docker Development
      1. With Arch
      2. With Alpine
  5. Contributing
  6. FAQ
    1. Is pict-rs stateless?
    2. Can I use a different database?
    3. How can I submit changes?
    4. I want to configure with $format
    5. How do I donate?
  7. Common Problems
  8. License

Usage

Running

Commandline

$ pict-rs -h
A simple image hosting service

Usage: pict-rs [OPTIONS] <COMMAND>

Commands:
  run            Runs the pict-rs web server
  migrate-store  Migrates from one provided media store to another
  migrate-repo   Migrates from one provided repo to another
  help           Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)

Options:
  -c, --config-file <CONFIG_FILE>
          Path to the pict-rs configuration file
      --old-repo-path <OLD_REPO_PATH>
          Path to the old pict-rs sled database
      --old-repo-cache-capacity <OLD_REPO_CACHE_CAPACITY>
          The cache capacity, in bytes, allowed to sled for in-memory operations
      --log-format <LOG_FORMAT>
          Format of logs printed to stdout [possible values: compact, json, normal, pretty]
      --log-targets <LOG_TARGETS>
          Log levels to print to stdout, respects RUST_LOG formatting
      --log-spans
          Whether to log openning and closing of tracing spans to stdout
      --console-address <CONSOLE_ADDRESS>
          Address and port to expose tokio-console metrics
      --console-buffer-capacity <CONSOLE_BUFFER_CAPACITY>
          Capacity of the console-subscriber Event Buffer
      --opentelemetry-url <OPENTELEMETRY_URL>
          URL to send OpenTelemetry metrics
      --opentelemetry-service-name <OPENTELEMETRY_SERVICE_NAME>
          Service Name to use for OpenTelemetry
      --opentelemetry-targets <OPENTELEMETRY_TARGETS>
          Log levels to use for OpenTelemetry, respects RUST_LOG formatting
      --save-to <SAVE_TO>
          File to save the current configuration for reproducible runs
  -h, --help
          Print help
  -V, --version
          Print version

Try running help commands for more runtime configuration options

$ pict-rs run -h
$ pict-rs run filesystem -h
$ pict-rs run object-storage -h
$ pict-rs run filesystem sled -h
$ pict-rs run filesystem postgres -h
$ pict-rs run object-storage sled -h
$ pict-rs run object-storage postgres -h

See pict-rs.toml for more configuration

Example:

Run with the default configuration

$ ./pict-rs run

Running on all interfaces, port 8080, storing data in /opt/data

$ ./pict-rs \
    run -a 0.0.0.0:8080 \
    filesystem -p /opt/data/files \
    sled -p /opt/data/sled-repo

Running locally, port 9000, storing data in data/, and converting all uploads to PNG

$ ./pict-rs \
    run \
        -a 127.0.0.1:9000 \
        --media-format png \
    filesystem -p data/files \
    sled -p data/sled-repo

Running locally, port 8080, storing data in data/, and only allowing the thumbnail and identity filters

$ ./pict-rs \
    run \
        -a 127.0.0.1:8080 \
        --media-filters thumbnail \
        --media-filters identity \
    filesystem -p data/files \
    sled -p data/sled-repo

Running from a configuration file

$ ./pict-rs -c ./pict-rs.toml run

Migrating to object storage from filesystem storage. For more detailed info, see Filesystem to Object Storage Migration

$ ./pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
    filesystem -p data/files \
    object-storage \
        -a ACCESS_KEY \
        -b BUCKET_NAME \
        -r REGION \
        -s SECRET_KEY

Dumping configuration overrides to a toml file

$ ./pict-rs --save-to pict-rs.toml \
    run \
    object-storage \
        -a ACCESS_KEY \
        -b pict-rs \
        -r us-east-1 \
        -s SECRET_KEY \
    sled -p data/sled-repo

Docker

Run the following commands:

# Create a folder for the files (anywhere works)
$ mkdir ./pict-rs
$ cd ./pict-rs
$ mkdir -p volumes/pictrs
$ sudo chown -R 991:991 volumes/pictrs
$ wget https://git.asonix.dog/asonix/pict-rs/raw/branch/main/docker/prod/docker-compose.yml
$ sudo docker-compose up -d
Note
  • pict-rs makes use of the system's temporary folder. This is generally /tmp on linux

Bare Metal

There are a few options for acquiring pict-rs to run outside of docker.

  1. Packaged via your distro of choice
  2. Binary download from the releases page
  3. Compiled from source

If running outside of docker, the recommended configuration method is via the pict-rs.toml file. When running pict-rs, the file can be passed to the binary as a commandline argument.

$ pict-rs -c /path/to/pict-rs.toml run
Distro Package

If getting pict-rs from your distro, please make sure it's a recent version (meaning 0.3.x stable, or 0.4.x stable). If it is older, consider using an alternative option for installing pict-rs. I am currently aware of pict-rs packaged in the AUR and nixpkgs, but there may be other distros that package it as well.

Binary Download

pict-rs provides precompiled binaries that should work on any linux system for x86_64, aarch64, and armv7h on the releases page. If downloading a binary, make sure that you have the following dependencies installed:

  • imagemagick 7
  • ffmpeg 5 or 6
  • exiftool 12 (sometimes called perl-image-exiftool)

These binaries are called by pict-rs to process uploaded media, so they must be in the $PATH available to pict-rs.

A notable issue here is imagemagick 7, which is not packaged in Debian Sid and therefore unavailable in any version of Debian or Ubuntu. If you are running an ubuntu or debian system, consider using the Nix installation and run method.

More information is available in the Ubuntu and Debian docs

Compile from Source

pict-rs can be compiled from source using a recent version of the rust compiler. I do development and produce releases on 1.72. pict-rs also requires the protoc protobuf compiler to be present at build-time in order to enable use of tokio-console.

Like the Binary Download option, imagemagick, ffmpeg, and exiftool must be installed for pict-rs to run properly.

Nix

pict-rs comes with an associated nix flake. This is useful for the development environment, but can also be used to run a "production" version of pict-rs with all the neccessary dependencies already provided.

The Nix package manager can be installed with these instructions. After installation, two experimental features must be enabled: flake and nix-command. These need to be added in /etc/nix/nix.conf:

experimental-features = nix-command flakes

After enabling flakes, you can run nix build from the pict-rs source directory. This will produce a nix package containing pict-rs and its dependencies. It will also create a result symlink in the pict-rs directory that links to the newly built package. The contents of result should be a single folder bin with a single file pict-rs inside. This file is a shell script that invokes the pict-rs binary with the required $PATH to find imagemagick 7, ffmpeg 6, and exiftool. You can treat this shell script as if it were the true pict-rs binary, passing it the same arguments you would pict-rs.

Example:

./result/bin/pict-rs -c dev.toml run

API

pict-rs offers the following endpoints:

  • POST /image for uploading an image. Uploaded content must be valid multipart/form-data with an image array located within the images[] key

    This endpoint returns the following JSON structure on success with a 201 Created status

    {
        "files": [
            {
                "delete_token": "JFvFhqJA98",
                "file": "lkWZDRvugm.jpg",
                "details": {
                    "width": 800,
                    "height": 800,
                    "content_type": "image/jpeg",
                    "created_at": "2022-04-08T18:33:42.957791698Z"
                }
            },
            {
                "delete_token": "kAYy9nk2WK",
                "file": "8qFS0QooAn.jpg",
                "details": {
                    "width": 400,
                    "height": 400,
                    "content_type": "image/jpeg",
                    "created_at": "2022-04-08T18:33:42.957791698Z"
                }
            },
            {
                "delete_token": "OxRpM3sf0Y",
                "file": "1hJaYfGE01.jpg",
                "details": {
                    "width": 400,
                    "height": 400,
                    "content_type": "image/jpeg",
                    "created_at": "2022-04-08T18:33:42.957791698Z"
                }
            }
        ],
        "msg": "ok"
    }
    
  • POST /image/backgrounded Upload an image, like the /image endpoint, but don't wait to validate and process it. This endpoint returns the following JSON structure on success with a 202 Accepted status

    {
        "uploads": [
            {
                "upload_id": "c61422e1-9294-4f1f-977f-c696b7939467",
            },
            {
                "upload_id": "62cc707f-725c-44b6-908f-2bd8946c3c29"
            }
        ],
        "msg": "ok"
    }
    
  • GET /image/download?url={url}&backgrounded=(true|false) Download an image from a remote server, returning the same JSON payload as the POST /image endpoint by default.

    if backgrounded is set to true, then the ingest processing will be queued for later and the response json will be the same as the POST /image/backgrounded endpoint.

  • GET /image/backgrounded/claim?upload_id={uuid} Wait for a backgrounded upload to complete, claiming it's result Possible results:

    • 200 Ok (validation and ingest complete):
      {
          "files": [
              {
                  "delete_token": "OxRpM3sf0Y",
                  "file": "1hJaYfGE01.jpg",
                  "details": {
                      "width": 400,
                      "height": 400,
                      "content_type": "image/jpeg",
                      "created_at": "2022-04-08T18:33:42.957791698Z"
                  }
              }
          ],
          "msg": "ok"
      }
      
    • 422 Unprocessable Entity (validation or otherwise failure):
      {
          "msg": "Error message about what went wrong with upload"
      }
      
    • 204 No Content (Upload validation and ingest is not complete, and waiting timed out) In this case, trying again is fine
  • GET /image/original/{alias} Get a full-resolution image. alias here is the file key from the /image endpoint's JSON

  • GET /image/original?alias={alias} Get a full-resolution image. alias here is the file key from the /image endpoint's JSON Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Serve an original file by its alias
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to proxy external URLs through the original endpoint. These proxied images are removed from pict-rs some time after their last access. This time is configurable with PICTRS__MEDIA__RETENTION__PROXY. See (./pict-rs.toml)[./pict-rs.toml] for more information.
  • HEAD /image/original/{alias} Returns just the headers from the analogous GET request.

  • HEAD /image/original?alias={alias} Returns just the headers from the analogous GET request. Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Serve an original file by its alias
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to proxy external URLs through the original endpoint. These proxied images are removed from pict-rs some time after their last access. This time is configurable with PICTRS__MEDIA__RETENTION__PROXY. See (./pict-rs.toml)[./pict-rs.toml] for more information.
  • GET /image/details/original/{alias} for getting the details of a full-resolution image. The returned JSON is structured like so:

    {
        "width": 800,
        "height": 537,
        "content_type": "image/webp",
        "created_at": "2022-04-08T18:33:42.957791698Z"
    }
    
  • GET /image/details/original?alias={alias} Same as the above endpoint but with a query instead of a path

    Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Serve an original file by its alias
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to get details about proxied images in pict-rs. These proxied images are removed from pict-rs some time after their last access. This time is configurable with PICTRS__MEDIA__RETENTION__PROXY. See (./pict-rs.toml)[./pict-rs.toml] for more information.
  • GET /image/blurhash?alias={alias} Create and store a blurhash for the provided alias

    Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Serve a blurhash for an image identified by the provided alias
    • ?proxy={url} Serve a blurhash for the media hosted at url This will download and store the original version of the specified media, as well as its blurhash. Retention for proxied media is configurable with PICTRS__MEDIA__RETENTION__PROXY. See (./pict-rs.toml)[./pict-rs.toml] for more information.

    The returned JSON is structured like so:

    {
        "msg": "ok",
        "blurhash": "LGF5]+Yk^6#M@-5c,1J5@[or[Q6."
    }
    
  • GET /image/process.{ext}?src={alias}&... Get a file with transformations applied. Available source arguments are

    • ?src={alias} This behavior is the same as in previous releases
    • ?alias={alias} This alias field is the same as the src field. Renamed for better consistency
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to proxy external URLs through the process endpoint. These proxied images are removed from pict-rs some time after their last access. This time is configurable with PICTRS__MEDIA__RETENTION__PROXY. See (./pict-rs.toml)[./pict-rs.toml] for more information.

    Existing transformations include

    • identity=true: apply no changes

    • blur={float}: apply a gaussian blur to the file

    • thumbnail={int}: produce a thumbnail of the image fitting inside an {int} by {int} square using raw pixel sampling

    • resize={int}: produce a thumbnail of the image fitting inside an {int} by {int} square using a Lanczos2 filter. This is slower than sampling but looks a bit better in some cases

    • resize={filter}.(a){int}: produce a thumbnail of the image fitting inside an {int} by {int} square, or when (a) is present, produce a thumbnail whose area is smaller than {int}. {filter} is optional, and indicates what filter to use when resizing the image. Available filters are Lanczos, Lanczos2, LanczosSharp, Lanczos2Sharp, Mitchell, and RobidouxSharp.

      Examples:

      • resize=300: Produce an image fitting inside a 300x300 px square
      • reizie=.a10000: Produce an image whose area is at most 10000 px
      • resize=Mitchell.200: Produce an image fitting inside a 200x200 px square using the Mitchell filter
      • resize=RobidouxSharp.a40000: Produce an image whose area is at most 40000 px using the RobidouxSharp filter
    • crop={int-w}x{int-h}: produce a cropped version of the image with an {int-w} by {int-h} aspect ratio. The resulting crop will be centered on the image. Either the width or height of the image will remain full-size, depending on the image's aspect ratio and the requested aspect ratio. For example, a 1600x900 image cropped with a 1x1 aspect ratio will become 900x900. A 1600x1100 image cropped with a 16x9 aspect ratio will become 1600x900.

    Supported ext file extensions include apng, avif, gif, jpg, jxl, png, and webp. Note that while avif and webp will work for both animated & non-animated images, some formats like apng and gif are only used to serve animations while others like jpg, jxl and png are only used to serve sill images.

    An example of usage could be

    GET /image/process.jpg?src=asdf.png&thumbnail=256&blur=3.0
    

    which would create a 256x256px JPEG thumbnail and blur it

  • HEAD /image/process.{ext}?src={alias} Returns just the headers from the analogous GET request. Returns 404 if the processed image has not been generated yet.

    Available source arguments are

    • ?src={alias} This behavior is the same as in previous releases
    • ?alias={alias} This alias field is the same as the src field. Renamed for better consistency
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to get headers for proxied images.
  • GET /image/process_backgrounded.{ext}?src={alias}&... queue transformations to be applied to a given file. This accepts the same arguments as the process.{ext} endpoint, but does not wait for the processing to complete.

    Available source arguments are

    • ?src={alias} This behavior is the same as in previous releases
    • ?alias={alias} This alias field is the same as the src field. Renamed for better consistency
  • GET /image/details/process.{ext}?src={alias}&... for getting the details of a processed image. The returned JSON is the same format as listed for the full-resolution details endpoint.

    Available source arguments are

    • ?src={alias} This behavior is the same as in previous releases
    • ?alias={alias} This alias field is the same as the src field. Renamed for better consistency
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to get details about proxied images.
  • GET /image/details/process.{ext}?alias={alias} Same as the above endpoint but with a query instead of a path

    Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Serve a processed file by its alias
    • ?proxy={url} This proxy field can be used to get details about proxied images in pict-rs. These proxied images are removed from pict-rs some time after their last access. This time is configurable with PICTRS__MEDIA__RETENTION__PROXY. See ./pict-rs.toml for more information.
  • DELETE /image/delete/{delete_token}/{alias} or GET /image/delete/{delete_token}/{alias} to delete a file, where delete_token and alias are from the /image endpoint's JSON

  • GET /healthz Check the health of the pict-rs server. This will check that the sled embedded database is functional and that the configured store is accessible

The following endpoints are protected by an API key via the X-Api-Token header, and are disabled unless the --api-key option is passed to the binary or the PICTRS__SERVER__API_KEY environment variable is set.

A secure API key can be generated by any password generator.

  • POST /internal/import for uploading an image while preserving the filename as the first alias. The upload format and response format are the same as the POST /image endpoint.

  • POST /internal/delete?alias={alias} Delete an alias without requiring a delete token. Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Delete a file alias
    • ?proxy={url} Delete a proxied file's alias

    This endpoint returns the following JSON

    {
        "msg": "ok",
    }
    
  • POST /internal/purge?alias={alias} Purge a file by it's alias. This removes all aliases and files associated with the query.

    Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Purge a file by it's alias
    • ?proxy={url} Purge a proxied file by its URL

    This endpoint returns the following JSON

    {
        "msg": "ok",
        "aliases": ["asdf.png"]
    }
    
  • GET /internal/aliases?alias={alias} Get the aliases for a file by its alias

    Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Get all aliases for a file by the provided alias
    • ?proxy={url} Get all aliases for a proxied file by its url

    This endpiont returns the same JSON as the purge endpoint

  • DELETE /internal/variants Queue a cleanup for generated variants of uploaded images.

    If any of the cleaned variants are fetched again, they will be re-generated.

  • GET /internal/identifier?alias={alias} Get the image identifier (file path or object path) for a given alias.

    Available source arguments are

    • ?alias={alias} Get the identifier for a file by the provided alias
    • ?proxy={url} Get the identifier for a proxied file by its url

    On success, the returned json should look like this:

    {
        "msg": "ok",
        "identifier": "/path/to/object"
    }
    
  • POST /internal/set_not_found?alias={alias} Set the 404 image that is served from the original and process endpoints. The image used must already be uploaded and have an alias. The request should look like this:

    {
        "alias": "asdf.png"
    }
    

    On success, the returned json should look like this:

    {
        "msg": "ok"
    }
    

    In the event pict-rs can't find the provided alias, it will return a 400 Bad Request with the following json:

    {
        "msg": "No hash associated with provided alias"
    }
    
  • POST /internal/export Export the current sled database to the configured export_path. This is useful for taking backups of a running pict-rs server. On success, it will return

    {
        "msg": "ok"
    }
    

    Restoring from an exported database is as simple as:

    1. Stopping pict-rs
    2. Moving your current sled-repo directory to a safe location (e.g. sled-repo.bak)
      $ mv sled-repo sled-repo.bak
      
    3. Copying an exported database to sled-repo
      $ cp -r exports/2023-07-08T22:26:21.194126713Z sled-repo
      
    4. Starting pict-rs
  • GET /internal/hashes?{query} Get a page of hashes ordered by newest to oldest based on the provided query. On success, it will return the following json:

    {
        "msg": "ok",
        "page": {
            "limit": 20,
            "current": "some-long-slug-string",
            "next": "some-long-slug-string",
            "prev": "some-long-slug-string",
            "hashes": [{
                "hex": "some-long-hex-encoded-hash",
                "aliases": [
                    "file-alias.png",
                    "another-alias.png",
                ],
                "details": {
                    "width": 1920,
                    "height": 1080,
                    "frames": 30,
                    "content_type": "video/mp4",
                    "created_at": "2022-04-08T18:33:42.957791698Z"
                }
            }]
        }
    }
    

    Note that some fields in this response are optional (including next, prev, current, details and frames)

    Available query options:

    • empty: this fetches the first page of the results (e.g. the newest media)
    • ?slug={slug} this fetches a specific page of results. the slug field comes from the current, next, or prev fields in the page json
    • ?timestamp={timestamp} this fetches results older than the specified timestamp for easily searching into the data. the timestamp should be formatted according to RFC3339
    • ?limit={limit} specifies how many results to return per page
  • POST /internal/prune_missing?force={force} Spawn a background task that will check every hash in the database for an associated media file, deleting any record that is missing its media.

    WARNING: This operation is very destructive. Please take backups before invoking it.

    This endpoint can be hit repeatedly to check the progress of the preparations. The returned progress value represents how many records have been marked for pruning.

    Optionally, the force query parameter can be passed with a value of true in order to make pict-rs spawn another task if the current one seems stuck.

Additionally, all endpoints support setting deadlines, after which the request will cease processing. To enable deadlines for your requests, you can set the X-Request-Deadline header to an i128 value representing the number of nanoseconds since the UNIX Epoch. A simple way to calculate this value is to use the time crate's OffsetDateTime::unix_timestamp_nanos method. For example,

// set deadline of 1ms
let deadline = time::OffsetDateTime::now_utc() + time::Duration::new(0, 1_000);

let request = client
    .get("http://pict-rs:8080/image/details/original/asdfghjkla.png")
    .insert_header(("X-Request-Deadline", deadline.unix_timestamp_nanos().to_string())))
    .send()
    .await;

Finally, there's an optional prometheus scrape endpoint that can be enabled with the PICTRS__METRICS__PROMETHEUS_ADDRESS configuration. This binds to a separate port from the main pict-rs application. See pict-rs.toml for more details.

Administration

Backups

pict-rs maintains two folders that matter: the sled-repo directory, and the files directory. sled-repo is where it keeps metadata about files such as: their location, their aliases, their processed versions' locations, their dimensions, mime type, etc. files is where it puts uploaded files when storing on the local filesystem.

The sled-repo folder is generally small compared to the files folder, and backing it up can be as simple as copying the folder somewhere else. I recommend doing so while pict-rs is not running.

If you can't stop pict-rs, but would like to back up the database, there is an internal endpoint at /internal/export documented in Api that can be used to produce a copy of the current database for easy backups.

0.4 to 0.5 Migration Guide

Note

If you're running an older release of pict-rs, you'll first need to update to 0.4 before continuing on to 0.5. See the 0.3 to 0.4 migration guide.

Overview

pict-rs will automatically migrate from the 0.4 db format to the 0.5 db format on the first launch of 0.5. This process might take a while, especially if you've been running pict-rs since before 0.3. The reason for this is pict-rs now requires original files to have associated details records stored in the database, and while generating these records happened by default for 0.3 and 0.4, images uploaded before this was standard may not have ever had their details records generated.

Upgrade Configuration

Because upgrades may take so long, there is a new configuration option introduced to attempt to improve its speed.

[upgrade]
concurrency = 32

or

PICTRS__UPGRADE__CONCURRENCY=32

or

$ pict-rs run --upgrade-concurrency 32

This value dictates how many hashes pict-rs will attempt to migrate at the same time. Since this value will increase the number of concurrent connections to the Repo and the Store, as well as potentially increase CPU and memory use, it should be considered carefully before increasing.

For large-scale deployments, it is likely this value should be bumped to 128, 256, or even 512. The default value is 32.

Configuration Updates

Previously, pict-rs only had two categories for files: images and videos. pict-rs 0.5 adds a third category: animation. With the new explicit support for animated file types, some configuration options have moved.

Image Changes
Old Environment Variable New Environment Variable
PICTRS__MEDIA__FORMAT PICTRS__MEDIA__IMAGE__FORMAT
PICTRS__MEDIA__MAX_WIDTH PICTRS__MEDIA__IMAGE__MAX_WIDTH
PICTRS__MEDIA__MAX_HEIGHT PICTRS__MEDIA__IMAGE__MAX_HEIGHT
PICTRS__MEDIA__MAX_AREA PICTRS__MEDIA__IMAGE__MAX_AREA
PICTRS__MEDIA__IMAGE__MAX_FILE_SIZE
Old TOML Value New TOML Value
[media] format [media.image] format
[media] max_width [media.image] max_width
[media] max_height [media.image] max_height
[media] max_area [media.image] max_area
[media.image] max_file_size
Animation Changes
Old Environment Variable New Environment Variable
PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_WIDTH PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__MAX_WIDTH
PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_HEIGHT PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__MAX_HEIGHT
PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_AREA PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__MAX_AREA
PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_FILE_SIZE PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__MAX_FILE_SIZE
PICTRS__MEDIA__GIF__MAX_FRAME_COUNT PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__MAX_FRAME_COUNT
PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__FORMAT
PICTRS__MEDIA__ANIMATION__MAX_FILE_SIZE
Old TOML Value New TOML Value
[media.gif] max_width [media.animation] max_width
[media.gif] max_height [media.animation] max_height
[media.gif] max_area [media.animation] max_area
[media.gif] max_file_size [media.animation] max_file_size
[media.gif] max_frame_count [media.animation] max_frame_count
[media.animation] format
[media.animation] max_file_size
Video Changes
Old Environment Variable New Environment Variable
PICTRS__MEDIA__ENABLE_SILENT_VIDEO PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__ENABLE
PICTRS__MEDIA__ENABLE_FULL_VIDEO PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__ALLOW_AUDIO
PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO_CODEC PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__VIDEO_CODEC
PICTRS__MEDIA__AUDIO_CODEC PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__AUDIO_CODEC
PICTRS__MEDIA__MAX_FRAME_COUNT PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__MAX_FRAME_COUNT
PICTRS__MEDIA__ENABLE_FULL_VIDEO PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__ALLOW_AUDIO
PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__MAX_WIDTH
PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__MAX_HEIGHT
PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__MAX_AREA
PICTRS__MEDIA__VIDEO__MAX_FILE_SIZE
Old TOML Value New TOML Value
[media] enable_silent_video [media.video] enable
[media] enable_full_video [media.video] allow_audio
[media] video_codec [media.video] video_codec
[media] audio_codec [media.video] audio_codec
[media] max_frame_count [media.video] max_frame_count
[media] enable_full_video [media.video] allow_audio
[media.video] max_width
[media.video] max_height
[media.video] max_area
[media.video] max_file_size

Note that although each media type now includes its own MAX_FILE_SIZE configuration, the PICTRS__MEDIA__MAX_FILE_SIZE value still exists as a global limit for any file type.

In addition to all the configuration options mentioned above, there are now individual quality settings that can be configured for each image and animation type, as well as for video files. Please see the pict-rs.toml file for more information.

Upgrading Directly to Postgres

pict-rs supports migrating directly to the postgres repo during the upgrade. In order to do this, the postgres repo needs to be configured and the old_repo needs to be specified. The old_repo section just contains the path of the repo section in your 0.4 config.

Example:

[old_repo]
path = '/mnt/sled-repo'

[repo]
type = 'postgres'
url = 'postgres://user:password@host:5432/db'

Or with environment varaibles:

PICTRS__OLD_REPO__PATH=/mnt/sled-repo
PICTRS__REPO__TYPE=postgres
PICTRS__REPO__URL=postgres://user:password@host:5432/db

Once these variables are set, 0.5 can be started and the migration will automatically occur.

Filesystem to Object Storage migration

Make sure you take a backup of the sled-repo directory before running this command!!! Migrating to object storage updates the database and if you need to revert for any reason, you'll want a backup.

It is possible to migrate to object storage. This can be useful if hosting in a cloud environment, since object storage is generally far cheaper than block storage.

There's a few required configuration options for object storage. I will try to explain:

  • endpoint: this is the URL at which the object storage is available. Generally this URL will look like https://<bucket-name>.<region>.s3.example.com, but sometimes it could look like https://<region>.s3.example.com or just https://s3.example.com
  • bucket-name: this is name of the "bucket" in which the objects will reside. A bucket must already exist for the migration to work - pict-rs will not create the bucket on it's own. It is up to you to create a bucket with your storage provider ahead of time.
  • region: this is the "location" in which your bucket resides. It may not be meaningful depending on your cloud provider, but it is always required.
  • access-key: this is a secret your cloud provider will give to you in order to access the bucket
  • secret-key: this is a second secret your cloud provider will give to you in order to access the bucket

Additionally, there's a commandline argument that can be set to change the default level of concurrency for the migration. pict-rs will attempt to migrate 32 hashes at a time, but for large deployments, it may be worth trying to increase this value. Setting it to 128, 256, or even 512 could be useful. Note that the bigger this value, the more concurrent connections to the object storage provider will be made.

The command will look something like this:

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
        --concurrency 32 \
    filesystem \
        -p /path/to/files \
    object-storage \
        -e https://object-storage-endpoint \
        -b bucket-name \
        -r region \
        -a access-key \
        -s secret-key \
    sled \
        -p /path/to/sled-repo

If you are running the docker container with default paths, it can be simplified to the following:

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
    filesystem \
    object-storage \
        -e https://object-storage-endpoint \
        -b bucket-name \
        -r region \
        -a access-key \
        -s secret-key

This command must be run while pict-rs is offline.

If you're running with docker-compose, this could look like the following:

$ sudo docker compose stop pictrs # stop the pict-rs container
$ sudo docker compose run pictrs sh # launch a shell in the pict-rs container
> pict-rs --version # verify pict-rs version is recent (should probably be 0.4.0 or later)
> pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
    filesystem \
    object-storage \
        -e endpoint \
        -b bucket \
        -r region \
        -a -access-key \
        -s secret-key
> exit
$ vi docker-compose.yml # edit the docker-compose yaml however you like to edit it, make sure all the variables described below are set
$ sudo docker compose up -d pictrs # start pict-rs again after the migration. Note that this is not 'docker compose start'. using the `up` subcommand explicitly reloads configurations

depending on your version of docker or docker-compose, you might need to use the following command to open a shell:

$ sudo docker-compose run -i pictrs sh

Here's an example based on my own object storage that I host myself on kubernetes with garage:

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
    filesystem \
    object-storage \
        --use-path-style \
        -e http://garage-daemon.garage.svc:3900 \
        -b pict-rs \
        -r garage \
        -a <redacted> \
        -s <redacted>

Here's an example based on a backblaze b2 user's configuration;

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
    filesystem \
    object-storage \
        --use-path-style \
        -e https://s3.us-east-005.backblazeb2.com \
        -r us-east-005 \
        -b SitenamePictrs \
        -a redacted \
        -s redacted

After you've completed the migration, update your pict-rs configuration to use object storage. If you configure using environment variables, make sure the following are set:

  • PICTRS__STORE__TYPE=object_storage
  • PICTRS__STORE__ENDPOINT=https://object-storage-endpoint
  • PICTRS__STORE__BUCKET_NAME=bucket-name
  • PICTRS__STORE__REGION=region
  • PICTRS__STORE__USE_PATH_STYLE=false (set to true if your object storage requires path style access)
  • PICTRS__STORE__ACCESS_KEY=access-key
  • PICTRS__STORE__SECRET_KEY=secret-key

If you use the configuration file, this would be

[store]
type = "object_storage"
endpoint = "https://object-storage-endpoint"
bucket_name = "bucket-name"
region = "region"
use_path_style = false # Set to true if your object storage requires path style access
access_key = "access-key"
secret_key = "secret-key"

Migration Troubleshooting

If you see an error while trying to launch the migration that looks like this:

   0: IO error: could not acquire lock on "/mnt/sled-repo/v0.4.0-alpha.1/db": Os { code: 11, kind: WouldBlock, message: "Resource temporarily unavailable" }

This means that pict-rs could not open it's database. This is probably because another copy of pict-rs is currently running. Make sure to stop all running pict-rs processes before migrating.

If you are trying to migrate and seeing "Failed moving file. Retrying +1", Do not cancel the migration. Let it reach 10 retries. It will print a more meaningful error afterwards. Here are some examples of errors and their casuses:

Error:

   0: Error in store
   1: Error in object store
   2: Invalid status: 400 Bad Request
   2: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
      <Error>
          <Code>InvalidRequest</Code>
          <Message>Authorization header's Credential is malformed</Message>
      </Error>

Cause: the region was set improperly. Additionaly a path-style endpoint was used without passing --use-path-style

Error:

   0: Error in store
   1: Error in object store
   2: Invalid status: 403 Forbidden
   2: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
      <Error>
          <Code>InvalidAccessKeyId</Code>
          <Message>Malformed Access Key Id</Message>
      </Error>

Cause: the access key was set improperly

If you have enabled object storage without first migrating your existing files to object storage, these migrate commands may end up retrying file migrations indefinitely. In order to successfully resolve this multi-store problem the --skip-missing-files flag has been added to the migrate-store subcommand. This tells pict-rs not to retry migrating a file if that file returns some form of "not found" error.

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-store --skip-missing-files \
    filesystem -p /path/to/files \
    object-storage \
        -e https://object-storage-endpoint \
        -b bucket-name \
        -r region \
        -a access-key \
        -s secret-key \
    sled \
        -p /path/to/sled-repo

If you have trouble getting pict-rs to upload to your object storage, check a few things: Does your object storage require path-style access? Some object storage providers, like Contabo, don't support virtual hosted buckets. Here's a basic example:

Path style URL: https://region.example.com/bucket-name Virtual host style URL: https://bucket-name.region.example.com

If you do need to use path style, your command might look like this:

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-store \
    filesystem -p /path/to/files \
    object-storage \
        --use-path-style \
        -e https://object-storage-endpoint \
        -b bucket-name \
        -r region \
        -a access-key \
        -s secret-key \
    sled \
        -p /path/to/sled-repo

Additionally, some providers might require you include the region in your endpoint URL: https://region.host.com, while others might just require a top-level endpoint: https://example.com.

Check your object storage provider's documentation to be sure you're setting the right values.

Sled to Postgres Migration

If you upgraded to 0.5 without migrating to postgres at the same time, you can migrate to postgres after the fact with the built-in migration utility. Before running the migration, make sure you have a postgres role and database ready for pict-rs. The first thing pict-rs will do upon connecting to a new database is attempt to add the pgcrypto extension, so if the role you created for pict-rs does not have that permission, it will fail.

The migration command is fairly simple. It just needs the path to your existing repo and the URL to your new repo.

$ pict-rs \
    migrate-repo \
    sled -p /path/to-/sled-repo \
    postgres -u postgres://user:password@host:5432/db

If you're running with docker-compose, this could look like the following:

$ sudo docker compose stop pictrs # stop the pict-rs container
$ sudo docker compose run pictrs sh # launch a shell in the pict-rs container
> pict-rs --version # verify pict-rs version is recent (should probably be 0.5.0 or later)
> pict-rs \
    migrate-repo \
    sled -p /mnt/sled-repo \
    postgres -u postgres://user:password@host:5432/db
> exit
$ vi docker-compose.yml # edit the docker-compose yaml however you like to edit it, make sure all the variables described below are set
$ sudo docker compose up -d pictrs # start pict-rs again after the migration. Note that this is not 'docker compose start'. using the `up` subcommand explicitly reloads configurations

This command must be run while pict-rs is offline.

This migration should be pretty quick, since there's no actual files getting moved around. After the migration completes, make sure pict-rs is configured to use the postgres repo, then start it back up.

Example:

[repo]
type = 'postgres'
url = 'postgres://user:password@host:5432/db'

or

PICTRS__REPO__TYPE=postgres
PICTRS__REPO__URL=postgres://user:password@host:5432/db

Development

pict-rs has a few native dependencies that need to be installed in order for it to run properly. Currently these are as follows:

  • imagemagick 7.1.1 (although 7.0 and 7.1.0 may also work)
  • ffmpeg 6 (although 5 may also work)
  • exiftool 12.62 (although 12.50 or newer may also work)

Additionally, pict-rs requires a protobuf compiler during the compilation step to support tokio-console, a runtime debug tool.

Installing these from your favorite package manager should be sufficient. Below are some fun ways to develop and test a pict-rs binary.

Nix Development

I personally use nix for development. The provided flake.nix file should be sufficient to create a development environment for pict-rs on any linux distribution, provided nix is installed.

With direnv and nix-direnv

With these tools, the pict-rs development environment can be automatically loaded when entering the pict-rs directory

Setup (only once):

$ echo 'use flake' > .envrc
$ direnv allow

Running:

$ cargo run -- -c dev.toml run

With just Nix

$ nix develop
$ cargo run -- -c dev.toml run

Docker Development

Previously, I have run pict-rs from inside containers that include the correct dependencies. The two options listed below are ones I have personally tried.

With Arch

This option doesn't take much configuration, just compile the binary and run it from inside the container

$ cargo build
$ sudo docker run --rm -it -p 8080:8080 -v "$(pwd):/mnt" archlinux:latest
> pacman -Syu imagemagick ffmepg perl-image-exiftool
> PATH=$PATH:/usr/bin/vendor_perl /mnt/target/debug/pict-rs --log-targets debug run

With Alpine

This option requires cargo-zigbuild to be installed. Cargo Zigbuild is a tool that links rust binaries with Zig's linker, enabling easy cross-compiles to many targets. Zig has put a lot of effort into seamless cross-compiling, and it is nice to be able to take advantage of that work from rust.

$ cargo zigbuild --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-musl
$ sudo docker run --rm -it -p 8080:8080 -v "$(pwd):/mnt" alpine:3.18
> apk add imagemagick ffmpeg exiftool
> /mnt/target/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/debug/pict-rs --log-targets debug run

Contributing

Feel free to open issues for anything you find an issue with. Please note that any contributed code will be licensed under the AGPLv3.

FAQ

Question: Is pict-rs stateless

Answer: It can be. By default, pict-rs uses on-disk storage for files as well as an on-disk key-value store called sled for metadata. This is for ease of deployment for small setups. If you need pict-rs to keep no local state (aside from /tmp), it can be configured to use Object Storage for files and Postgres for metadata.

Question: Can I use a different database with pict-rs

Answer: Yes. pict-rs supports both sled and postgres for storing metadata. In the future I might also support BonsaiDB. If you want pict-rs to support another database, feel free to submit changes :)

Question: How can I submit changes

Answer: If you would like to contribute to pict-rs, you can push your code to a public git host of your choice and let me know you did so via matrix or email. I can pull and merge your changes into this repository from there.

Alternatively, you are welcome to email me a patch that I can apply.

I will not be creating additional accounts on my forgejo server, sorry not sorry.

Question: I want to configure it with yaml instead of toml

Answer: That's not a question, but you can configure pict-rs with json, hjson, yaml, ini, or toml. Writing configs in other formats is left as an exercise to the reader.

Question: How do I donate to pict-rs

Answer: You don't. I get paid by having a job where I do other stuff. Don't give me money that I don't need.

Common Problems

In some cases, pict-rs might crash and be unable to start again. The most common reason for this is the filesystem reached 100% and pict-rs could not write to the disk, but this could also happen if pict-rs is killed at an unfortunate time. If this occurs, the solution is to first get more disk for your server, and then look in the sled-repo directory for pict-rs. It's likely that pict-rs created a zero-sized file called snap.somehash.generating. Delete that file and restart pict-rs.

When running with the provided docker container, pict-rs might fail to start with an IO error saying "permission denied". This problably means pict-rs' volume is not owned by the correct user. Changing the ownership on the pict-rs volume to 991:991 should solve this problem.

License

Copyright © 2022 Riley Trautman

pict-rs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

pict-rs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. This file is part of pict-rs.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with pict-rs. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.