I second that actually and should have put it in my initial response.

-Andrew

On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 10:33 PM, Alexander Sicular <sicul...@gmail.com>wrote:

> Testing aside, I would not bind a production riak to an external
> interface. The recommended method is to access riak via an
> intermediary like nginx.
>
> -alexander
>
> On 2010-12-01, Andrew Stone <andrew.j.ston...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hi Stefan,
> >
> > You need to configure Riak to listen on the right interface. You are
> trying
> > to hit it from 127.0.0.1 which is only available from the local machine.
> >
> > If you set web_ip to 0.0.0.0 in app.config for riak_core it will listen
> on
> > all interfaces. Then you can try to hit it with a curl remotely using
> > myhost.com from your browser.
> >
> > -Andrew
> >
> > On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 9:27 PM, Stefan Scott Alexander <
> > stefanscottal...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >> Hi -
> >>
> >> SUMMARY:
> >> This may be a silly question but... after installing Riak via ssh, can I
> >> (or should I) test *remotely* it from a browser?
> >>
> >> I'm very excited about being able to learn how to use MapReduce with
> Riak.
> >>
> >> I installed Riak on my remote VPS server (running Debian 5.0 Lenny) -
> via
> >> Putty & SSH on my Windows laptop.
> >>
> >> So... if I PUT some data into Riak using curl, it seems to show up.
> >>
> >> But I can't see it in my browser if I go to my server, eg:
> >>
> >> http://myhost.com/riak/images/img001.jpg
> >>
> >> returns "Error 101" - webpage not available.
> >>
> >> Of course, since my 3 nodes are all at 127.0.0.1, then maybe I
> *shouldn't*
> >> be able to access them remotely from a browser.
> >>
> >> (By the way, I did open up my firewall on ports 8091, 8092, and 8093 -
> >> incoming and outgoing).
> >>
> >> Anyways... I was just wondering if anyone had any pointers.
> >>
> >> +++++
> >>
> >> DETAILS:
> >>
> >> (0) I followed the steps here:
> >>
> >> https://wiki.basho.com/display/RIAK/Building+a+Development+Environment
> >>
> >> and everything worked fine.
> >>
> >>
> >> (1) I ran a test:
> >>
> >> curl -H "Accept: text/plain" http://127.0.0.1:8091/stats
> >>
> >> and got the output:
> >>
> >> curl -H "Accept: text/plain" http://127.0.0.1:8091/stats
> >> {
> >>     "vnode_gets": 0,
> >>     "vnode_puts": 0,
> >>     "read_repairs": 0,
> >>     "vnode_gets_total": 2,
> >>     "vnode_puts_total": 1,
> >>     "node_gets": 0,
> >>     "node_gets_total": 2,
> >>     "node_get_fsm_time_mean": "undefined",
> >>     "node_get_fsm_time_median": "undefined",
> >>     "node_get_fsm_time_95": "undefined",
> >>     "node_get_fsm_time_99": "undefined",
> >>     "node_get_fsm_time_100": "undefined",
> >>     "node_puts": 0,
> >>     "node_puts_total": 1,
> >>     "node_put_fsm_time_mean": "undefined",
> >>     "node_put_fsm_time_median": "undefined",
> >>     "node_put_fsm_time_95": "undefined",
> >>     "node_put_fsm_time_99": "undefined",
> >>     "node_put_fsm_time_100": "undefined",
> >>     "read_repairs_total": 0,
> >>     "cpu_nprocs": 291,
> >>     "cpu_avg1": 0,
> >>     "cpu_avg5": 0,
> >>     "cpu_avg15": 0,
> >>     "mem_total": 537100288,
> >>     "mem_allocated": 520372224,
> >>     "nodename": "d...@127.0.0.1",
> >>     "connected_nodes": [
> >>         "d...@127.0.0.1",
> >>         "d...@127.0.0.1"
> >>     ],
> >>     "sys_driver_version": "1.5",
> >>     "sys_global_heaps_size": 0,
> >>     "sys_heap_type": "private",
> >>     "sys_logical_processors": 2,
> >>     "sys_otp_release": "R14B",
> >>     "sys_process_count": 155,
> >>     "sys_smp_support": true,
> >>     "sys_system_version": "Erlang R14B (erts-5.8.1) [source] [smp:2:2]
> >> [rq:2] [async-threads:64] [kernel-poll:true]",
> >>     "sys_system_architecture": "i686-pc-linux-gnu",
> >>     "sys_threads_enabled": true,
> >>     "sys_thread_pool_size": 64,
> >>     "sys_wordsize": 4,
> >>     "ring_members": [
> >>         "d...@127.0.0.1",
> >>         "d...@127.0.0.1",
> >>         "d...@127.0.0.1"
> >>     ],
> >>     "ring_num_partitions": 64,
> >>     "ring_ownership": "[{'d...@127.0.0.1',21},{'d...@127.0.0.1',21},{'
> >> d...@127.0.0.1',22}]",
> >>     "ring_creation_size": 64,
> >>     "storage_backend": "riak_kv_bitcask_backend",
> >>     "pbc_connects_total": 0,
> >>     "pbc_connects": 0,
> >>     "pbc_active": 0,
> >>     "riak_err_version": "0.1.0",
> >>     "runtime_tools_version": "1.8.4.1",
> >>     "luwak_version": "1.0",
> >>     "skerl_version": "0.1",
> >>     "riak_kv_version": "0.13.0",
> >>     "riak_core_version": "0.13.0",
> >>     "luke_version": "0.2.2",
> >>     "erlang_js_version": "0.4.1",
> >>     "bitcask_version": "1.1.4",
> >>     "mochiweb_version": "1.7.1",
> >>     "webmachine_version": "1.7.3",
> >>     "crypto_version": "2.0.1",
> >>     "os_mon_version": "2.2.5",
> >>     "sasl_version": "2.1.9.2",
> >>     "stdlib_version": "1.17.1",
> >>     "kernel_version": "2.14.1"
> >>
> >> So that looked good.
> >>
> >>
> >> (2) To do a test involving an image, I copied an image (myimg.jpg) into
> my
> >> current directory, and then PUT the image into Riak (at
> >> riak/images/img001.jpg) using curl:
> >>
> >> curl -X PUT HTTP://127.0.0.1:8091/riak/images/img001.jpg -H
> "Content-type:
> >> image/jpeg" --data-binary @myimg.jpg
> >>
> >> Now the image seems to be stored properly in Riak, because it seems that
> I
> >> can GET it with curl:
> >>
> >> curl -v http://127.0.0.1:8091/riak/images/img001.jpg
> >>
> >> (This sends a bunch of garbled text to my Putty/SSH window. I assume
> this
> >> means "success" because it's just the binary data of the jpg file.)
> >>
> >>
> >> (3) I also PUT some text, and it seems to work:
> >>
> >> curl -v -d 'this is a test' -H "Content-Type: text/plain"
> >> http://127.0.0.1:8091/riak/test
> >>
> >> * About to connect() to 127.0.0.1 port 8091 (#0)
> >> *   Trying 127.0.0.1... connected
> >> * Connected to 127.0.0.1 (127.0.0.1) port 8091 (#0)
> >> > POST /riak/test HTTP/1.1
> >> > User-Agent: curl/7.18.2 (i486-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.18.2
> >> > OpenSSL/0.9.8g
> >> zlib/1.2.3.3 libidn/1.8 libssh2/0.18
> >> > Host: 127.0.0.1:8091
> >> > Accept: */*
> >> > Content-Type: text/plain
> >> > Content-Length: 14
> >> >
> >> < HTTP/1.1 201 Created
> >> < Vary: Accept-Encoding
> >> < Server: MochiWeb/1.1 WebMachine/1.7.3 (participate in the frantic)
> >> < Location: /riak/test/QTPs0B1zeu9I1WXtJnaAJpQyOee
> >> < Date: Thu, 02 Dec 2010 02:12:27 GMT
> >> < Content-Type: application/json
> >> < Content-Length: 0
> >> <
> >> * Connection #0 to host 127.0.0.1 left intact
> >> * Closing connection #0
> >>
> >> Then I GET the test (using the location key generated above):
> >>
> >> curl -v http://127.0.0.1:8091/riak/test/QTPs0B1zeu9I1WXtJnaAJpQyOee
> >>
> >> * About to connect() to 127.0.0.1 port 8091 (#0)
> >> *   Trying 127.0.0.1... connected
> >> * Connected to 127.0.0.1 (127.0.0.1) port 8091 (#0)
> >> > GET /riak/test/QTPs0B1zeu9I1WXtJnaAJpQyOee HTTP/1.1
> >> > User-Agent: curl/7.18.2 (i486-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.18.2
> >> > OpenSSL/0.9.8g
> >> zlib/1.2.3.3 libidn/1.8 libssh2/0.18
> >> > Host: 127.0.0.1:8091
> >> > Accept: */*
> >> >
> >> < HTTP/1.1 200 OK
> >> < X-Riak-Vclock: a85hYGBgzGDKBVIsbGvXVWcwJTLmsTJ012Qf48sCAA==
> >> < Vary: Accept-Encoding
> >> < Server: MochiWeb/1.1 WebMachine/1.7.3 (participate in the frantic)
> >> < Link: </riak/test>; rel="up"
> >> < Last-Modified: Thu, 02 Dec 2010 02:12:27 GMT
> >> < ETag: 35XAETNjfRGZJESsKwuMvB
> >> < Date: Thu, 02 Dec 2010 02:12:47 GMT
> >> < Content-Type: text/plain
> >> < Content-Length: 14
> >> <
> >> * Connection #0 to host 127.0.0.1 left intact
> >> * Closing connection #0
> >> this is a test
> >>
> >>
> >> OK, so that's the silly question I have: If I'm connecting to this
> server
> >> remotely, is there any point in trying to see that data from a browser?
> >>
> >> If I do the following:
> >>
> >> http://myhost.com:8091/riak/images/img001.jpg
> >> http://myhost.com:8091/riak/test/QTPs0B1zeu9I1WXtJnaAJpQyOee
> >>
> >> the browser just says "web page unavailable".
> >>
> >> +++++
> >>
> >> Anyways, everything probably *is* working fine - and I probably just
> >> shouldn't be trying to test it from a remote browser - because normally
> I
> >> wouldn't access "raw" Riak data directly from a browser, right?
> Eventually
> >> I'll have some sort of web application framework set up (eg, Nitrogen),
> >> and
> >> in the source of a web page I'll be using a Riak URL as a datasource -
> >> say,
> >> to send out some JSON to populate a control on the web page, right?
> >>
> >> Sorry about this newbie question! Thanks for any pointers.
> >>
> >> - Scott
> >>
> >>
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> riak-users mailing list
> >> riak-users@lists.basho.com
> >> http://lists.basho.com/mailman/listinfo/riak-users_lists.basho.com
> >>
> >>
> >
>
> --
> Sent from my mobile device
>
_______________________________________________
riak-users mailing list
riak-users@lists.basho.com
http://lists.basho.com/mailman/listinfo/riak-users_lists.basho.com

Reply via email to