Tools to generate and inspect IPLD data to assist in testing.
$ fixtureplate generate \
'dir(~5*file:1.0kB,~5*file:~102kB,2*dir{sharded}(~10*file:51kB),file:1.0MB{zero},file:10B,file:20B)'
Asks for a UnixFS directory structure with some files and directories, packaged into a well-ordered CAR file. The directory structure is described as:
A directory containing:
→ Approximately 5 files of 1.0 kB
→ Approximately 5 files of approximately 102 kB
→ 2 directories sharded with bitwidth 4 containing:
→ Approximately 10 files of 51 kB
→ A file of 1.0 MB containing just zeros
→ A file of 10 B
→ A file of 20 B
$ fixtureplate explain \
--car bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi.car
/ipfs/bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi?dag-scope=all
bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi | Directory | /
bafybeih4rlw42wbsamz3zpodkps23kezqqytytdij6ae6sjhq3qvubqwla | HAMTShard | ↳ /Abscond8
bafkreicp3wpwpwpl6fh2d53uo7tprdkodd2b2a4trmauad6eudfczons3e | RawLeaf | ↳ /Abscond8/5 [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreicmstgzmn4nqwvswdqdfvh4vzijme36saambqtsjgljyx4yfrbhhi | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/i [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreig2bb4fh6e7p2gtxcuxlwkdkkt6egsbtstrdfnaw2hqb2v2qbnoq4 | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/wæterscipe [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreidre3o7jeohihhiv3ddbj6zxxe7ftgbvquv6k6lzxh57ba42aq4ei | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/ẓẽṕhýr [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreidmzymddrsn4ttxijrc5rjhfidvg5q5r2xso22ktd7lrzvjiryloe | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/Polonius [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreienalqkpdgogmjdw7acylwjixmpub7db3have22rjzgc7jqm7cvya | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/eorþwerod [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreihwwqxfejrgwx36vq5ilu2hyn5epgvwvl4shtw6relx4t45msb7ne | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/Iago [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreigjovj6estaghq7fz7c4cjwgntcthfcdur6ayotwqxyksnwwfpvoq | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/juxtapositionally [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreigvz2koxrdifsaznvugtdchyegcpogvsmhsgo3ccf44s54s4b7uiy | RawLeaf | /Abscond8/snozzle [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreidv3vhd4iwgtx3v3mxcz53y2ogrpnu7e4ilxwibqvz3er4bdpukbu | RawLeaf | /E [0:19] (20 B)
bafkreiapy6vr7t56t5oir762ul3l4hmdgutdte6b5qvwufs3bpvu44jrly | RawLeaf | /Fandango [0:111516] (111,517 B)
bafkreigvuhqznqhoxmtu2amw2imgq5plnfttmncplbjkyjarojvjoiueya | RawLeaf | /brackle [0:999] (1,000 B)
bafybeidyhi62ammifxk2mtcqdt5hr3d2a2ikoo7nsfbfvohli2njluk7ya | HAMTShard | /eorþscūa
bafkreico5f2zayg4nnlkdvykwwodpkywnnlmmdm7vsfwrspq3twcr2s2q4 | RawLeaf | ↳ /eorþscūa/Persnickety [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreibssfqg3gf6k5zr4kgc2y64rcilfl3lcuv2brupd3qwhk7bermjra | RawLeaf | /eorþscūa/Guildenstern [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreibkpahul4fxq42jzunujvbt3j44t2p5had3nrwibghomgar4q23zy | RawLeaf | /eorþscūa/Rigmarole [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreicm2ijz6225pp6mtr3na5umyiynkh6bme7kvjyki5acb4hl5b6zsa | RawLeaf | /eorþscūa/Titania [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafybeidbdgc42ogob2s6jv6oqgmsxvanpvai5yw5lgftpkqbu36oebb7ii | HAMTShard | /eorþscūa [1E]
bafkreid4dvstcnpqdmouolvcyxajnrsp5ohvrtjjtpemagxrnwgtoa2dse | RawLeaf | ↳ /eorþscūa/jinty [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreignyiotu3a5be6mbjq5kw4ghwalk2mmqqp2u4mitevzdp6zdgdyf4 | RawLeaf | /eorþscūa/mibber [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreifmf6t3l6gl5id6k3zrdpeidiypv4qoav4gi2fw2kmwdivaxfnkg4 | RawLeaf | /eorþscūa/5h4r3d [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreif4q6p544er5krzvcpebqwn4ovnnoagink3bjsfm7veodwbkcr4bi | RawLeaf | /eorþscūa/brobdingnagian [0:50999] (51,000 B)
bafkreiecrqy3tdnff5ztffcf2a3t6s3evk5tz7gp7nj5iuswchxgye7bgm | RawLeaf | /eorþtæfl [0:101689] (101,690 B)
bafkreifxqp3lpiis4furgfwsf7vnu3ildskg47ucgpvyhzndtdayitvj3q | RawLeaf | /flippet [0:999] (1,000 B)
bafkreidws6mg2odvhal7lr52vfagjohxy3ofbang7q5johpvhmnl6zsxcy | RawLeaf | /go [0:999] (1,000 B)
bafybeibvjrzbx6m66lyh7vu526jkjcvw3tgssjntylas5ikmxmadbtqwee | File | /hēahgerefa [0:999999] (1,000,000 B)
bafkreihqnlkfmwgyj34ctwxiobr42xh2p6rxpxp3lygh5albhsgmylqfki | RawLeaf | ↳ /hēahgerefa [0:256143] (256,144 B)
bafkreihqnlkfmwgyj34ctwxiobr42xh2p6rxpxp3lygh5albhsgmylqfki | RawLeaf | /hēahgerefa [256144:512287] (256,144 B)
bafkreihqnlkfmwgyj34ctwxiobr42xh2p6rxpxp3lygh5albhsgmylqfki | RawLeaf | /hēahgerefa [512288:768431] (256,144 B)
bafkreibzz7ccqrjibdd6ew2iqdyccc4hprasqy22rrkgdgmtt7pxhd7way | RawLeaf | /hēahgerefa [768432:999999] (231,568 B)
bafkreibs4zufdog5ptkw5pmnohx7rkjcbrngk5qzra4gys3cvtucua6f6a | RawLeaf | /klop [0:9] (10 B)
bafkreieanunxuk4a27rb4q6uksyk6iieycaqiizqxa4nw3jurnamk65ewa | RawLeaf | /overenthusiastically [0:109434] (109,435 B)
bafkreidsqiwdgu25qgtmoz3rwa7esikryqpr3wfhg7u4krdwm67wuw47yq | RawLeaf | /p [0:95598] (95,599 B)
bafkreifme6jeysy43bb64rcwwcik2nb3p3bvbzy22idg2ujzykx64geuse | RawLeaf | /ye [0:86970] (86,971 B)
bafkreiaukjbwfe7nbfuabgkh3hy2eahptmlujxhesyb67cywddbvw4nwea | RawLeaf | /ŵăνę [0:999] (1,000 B)
$ fixtureplate explain \
--car bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi.car \
--path /eorþscūa/Guildenstern
/ipfs/bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi/eorþscūa/Guildenstern?dag-scope=all
bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi | Directory | /
bafybeidyhi62ammifxk2mtcqdt5hr3d2a2ikoo7nsfbfvohli2njluk7ya | HAMTShard | ↳ /eorþscūa
bafkreibssfqg3gf6k5zr4kgc2y64rcilfl3lcuv2brupd3qwhk7bermjra | RawLeaf | ↳ /eorþscūa/Guildenstern [0:50999] (51,000 B)
$ fixtureplate explain \
--car bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi.car \
--query '/ipfs/bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi/hēahgerefa?dag-scope=entity&entity-bytes=550000:-200000'
/ipfs/bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi/hēahgerefa?dag-scope=entity&entity-bytes=550000:-200000
bafybeia7igckzgzxeyh5acp2l4etsa3rk2hf533nlwgeggxx4xsjjnxdwi | Directory | /
bafybeibvjrzbx6m66lyh7vu526jkjcvw3tgssjntylas5ikmxmadbtqwee | File | ↳ /hēahgerefa [0:999999] (1,000,000 B)
bafybeibvjrzbx6m66lyh7vu526jkjcvw3tgssjntylas5ikmxmadbtqwee | File | ↳ /hēahgerefa [0:999999] (1,000,000 B)
bafkreihqnlkfmwgyj34ctwxiobr42xh2p6rxpxp3lygh5albhsgmylqfki | RawLeaf | ↳ /hēahgerefa [512288:768431] (256,144 B)
bafkreibzz7ccqrjibdd6ew2iqdyccc4hprasqy22rrkgdgmtt7pxhd7way | RawLeaf | /hēahgerefa [768432:999999] (231,568 B)
To install the latest version of go-fixtureplate, run:
$ go install github.com/ipld/go-fixtureplate/cmd/fixtureplate@latest
Binaries are directly available for download on the releases page.
Alternatively, use go-fixtureplate as a library in your application by importing github.com/ipld/go-fixtureplate
.
Explain the IPLD contents and paths in a CAR file.
$ fixtureplate explain --car=<car> \
[--root=<cid>] \
[--path=<path>] \
[--scope=<scope>] \
[--bytes=<byte range>] \
[--duplicates] \
[--full-path=false] \
[--ignore-missing]
Or
$ fixtureplate explain --car=<car> --query=<query> [--full-path=false] [--ignore-missing]
Where:
--car
specifies the path to a CAR file to inspect.--query
specifies an IPFS Trustless Gateway style query to execute. e.g./ipfs/<cid>/<path>?dag-scope=<scope>&entity-bytes=<byte range>
. See the specification for full details. Note though that the query here also includes some elements not normally provided on the query string, such as thedups=y|n
which is normally in theAccept
header.--root
specifies a root CID to use, overriding the root CID in the CAR file or the--query
. If not specified, the root CID in the CAR file or--query
will be used. This may be useful for cases where you are dealing with a CAR without roots, or you want to start from a sub-DAG in the CAR.--path
(default:/
) specifies a path through the DAG to follow. If not specified, an implicit path of/
will be used, which will traverse and explain the entire DAG. This would be equivalent to--query=/ipfs/<cid>?dag-scope=all
.--scope
(or--dag-scope
, default:all
) specifies the scope of the traversal at the terminus of the PATH. See the IPFS Trustless Gateway specification for full details. If not specified, the default scope isall
. Options includeblock
, to halt at the block, andentity
to halt at the block or sharded entity (directory or file) at the terminus of the path.--bytes
(or--entity-bytes
) specifies the byte range of the entity to return. See the IPFS Trustless Gateway specification for full details. If not specified, the default is to return the entire entity. Supplying a byte range will implicitly set the scope toentity
.--duplicates
(or--dups
, default:true
) specifies whether to include duplicate blocks in the output. If not specified, the default is to include duplicates.--full-path
(default:true
) specifies whether to include the full path in the output. If not specified, the default is to include the full path.--ignore-missing
(default:false
) specifies whether to ignore missing blocks. If not specified, the default is to error on missing blocks. Turning this on may be useful to explain partial CAR files, such as those downloaded via the IPFS Trustless Gateway using a path, or scope other thanall
.
Generate IPLD data according to a simple DSL that describes the structure of UnixFS file / directory trees.
$ fixtureplate generate [--seed=<seed>] <spec>
Where:
--seed
specifies a random seed to use for generating the data. If not specified, a random seed will be0
which should lead to reproducible results.<spec>
is a UnixFS directory structure specification. See the specification for full details.
generate
will construct a UnixFS structure in IPLD blocks and output a CAR file containing the data. The CAR will be properly ordered, have the correct root and the name will be {root cid}.car
. A textual description of the spec will also be printed to stdout in order to clarify what the request was.
The generate <spec>
DSL is a simple way to describe a UnixFS directory structure. It is a string that describes a directory structure, with some additional modifiers to control the size and content of the blocks in the DAG. It is intended to be used via the CLI with the generate
command, but can also be used via the github.com/ipld/go-fixtureplate/generator
package programmatically to generate UnixFS data for testing purposes.
The basic DSL uses file:size
and dir(...)
to describe a directory structure. For example:
dir(file:100B,file:200B)
Describes a directory containing two files, one of 100 bytes and one of 200 bytes.
The simplest form is a single file. The file
descriptor must also have an accompanying size after a :
character. e.g. file:200KiB
. Once this file is beyond the size of the default chunker used (splitting at 256,144 bytes), it will yield a multi-block sharded file. Otherwise it will be a single block file.
A directory can contain one or more files, which should be comma separated. The simplest directory has a single file. The dir
descriptor must be followed by a (...)
containing the files in the directory.
Directories can also be nested, and inteleaved with files. For example:
dir(file:100B,dir(file:200B,file:300B),file:400B)
Describes a directory containing two files, one of 100 bytes, one of 400 bytes, and one sub-directory containing two files, one of 200 bytes and one of 300 bytes.
File sizes can also be described as approximate using the ~
prefix to the size specifier. This inserts some randomness around a target size. For example: file:~100B
will generate a file of approximately 100 bytes. The actual size will be roughly between 90% and 110% of the target size. This is useful for generating data that is not exactly the same size every time, but is still within a reasonable range.
Both files and directories can have multipliers. By prefixing file
or dir
with N*
where N
is a number, the file or directory will be repeated N
times. For example:
dir(5*file:~100B)
Describes a directory containing 5 files of approximately 100 bytes each.
Multipliers can also be approximate in the same was as file sizes by using ~N*
. For example:
dir(~5*file:~100B,~5*dir(~10*file:50B))
Describes a directory containing approximately 5 files of approximately 100 bytes each, and approximately 5 directories each containing approximately 10 files of exactly 50 bytes each.
Directories can also be sharded. This is done by adding {sharded}
after the directory descriptor. For example:
dir{sharded}(~100*file:~100B)
Describes a directory containing approximately 100 files of approximately 100 bytes each, sharded with a default bitwidth of 4
. The normal bitwidth of a UnixFS sharded directory in production is 8
, which yields a fan-out of up to 256 children of each node. Using a bitwidth of 4
yields a fan-out of 16. This is useful for testing purposes as you can generate more collisions and deeper trees using a smaller number of children in the directory.
Alternative bitwidths can be specified by adding a number after sharded
, as in {sharded:N}
. For example:
dir{sharded:8}(~100*file:~100B)
Describes a directory containing approximately 100 files of approximately 100 bytes each, sharded with a bitwidth of 8
.
Files can be zeroed by adding {zero}
after the file descriptor. This will generate a file of the specified size, but with all bytes set to zero. This is primarily useful in generating duplicate blocks in your DAG. A file spanning many blocks with all-zeros will generate duplicate blocks for that file, and multiple files in a DAG with zeros will generate duplicate blocks across multiple files. For example:
dir(100*file:1MB{zero})
Describes a directory containing approximately 100 files of exactly 1MB each, all of which are zeroed. This will generate a DAG with many duplicate blocks. In practice, with the current defaults of generate
, this will generate a 5 block DAG, where one of those blocks is used 497 times.
Files and directories can be named by adding a {name:"..."}
after the file
or dir
descriptor. Multiples cannot be named, and collisions are the responsibility of the user. A mixture of named and non-named files will result in random names being assigned along with the fixed ones. Caution should be applied. For example:
dir(dir{name:"boop"}(file:100B{name:"foo"},file:200B{name:"bar"}))
Describes a directory containing a directory named boop
containing two files, one named foo
and one named bar
.
When using the generate
CLI command, a long-form textual description of the spec will be printed to stdout in order to clarify what the request was. For example:
dir(~5*file:1.0kB,~5*file:~102kB,2*dir{sharded}(~10*file:51kB),file:1.0MB{zero},file:10B,file:20B)
Is described as:
A directory containing:
→ Approximately 5 files of 1.0 kB
→ Approximately 5 files of approximately 102 kB
→ 2 directories sharded with bitwidth 4 containing:
→ Approximately 10 files of 51 kB
→ A file of 1.0 MB containing just zeros
→ A file of 10 B
→ A file of 20 B
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