Storj is building a decentralized cloud storage network. Check out our white paper for more info!
Storj is an S3-compatible platform and suite of decentralized applications that allows you to store data in a secure and decentralized manner. Your files are encrypted, broken into little pieces and stored in a global decentralized network of computers. Luckily, we also support allowing you (and only you) to retrieve those files!
All of our code for Storj v3 is open source. Have a code change you think would make Storj better? Please send a pull request along! Make sure to sign our Contributor License Agreement (CLA) first. See our license section for more details.
Have comments, bug reports, or suggestions? Want to propose a PR before hand-crafting it? Jump on to our Rocketchat and join the #dev channel to say hi to the developer community and to talk to the Storj core team.
See the breakdown of what we're building by checking out the following resources:
To get started running Storj locally, download and install the latest release of Go (at least Go 1.11) at golang.org.
You will also need Git. (brew install git
, apt-get install git
, etc).
If you're building on Windows, you also need to install and have gcc setup correctly.
We support Linux, Mac, and Windows operating systems. Other operating systems supported by Go should also be able to run Storj.
Aside about GOPATH: Go 1.11 supports a new feature called Go modules, and Storj has adopted Go module support. If you've used previous Go versions, Go modules no longer require a GOPATH environment variable. Go by default falls back to the old behavior if you check out code inside of the directory referenced by your GOPATH variable, so make sure to use another directory,
unset GOPATH
entirely, or setGO111MODULE=on
before continuing with these instructions.
First, fork our repo and clone your copy of our repository.
git clone [email protected]:<your-username>/storj storj
cd storj
Then, let's install Storj.
go install -v ./cmd/...
Make the changes you want to see! Once you're done, you can run all of the unit tests:
go test -v ./...
You can also execute only a single test package if you like. For example:
go test ./pkg/kademlia
. Add -v
for more informations about the executed unit
tests.
Use Git to push your changes to your fork:
git commit -a -m 'my changes!'
git push origin master
Use Github to open a pull request!
Our wiki has documentation and tutorials. Check out these three tutorials:
The network under construction (this repo) is currently licensed with the AGPLv3 license. Once the network reaches beta phase, we will be licensing all client-side code via the Apache v2 license.
For code released under the AGPLv3, we request that contributors sign our Contributor License Agreement (CLA) so that we can relicense the code under Apache v2, or other licenses in the future.
If you have any questions or suggestions please reach out to us on Rocketchat or Twitter.