diff --git a/Getting-Started.md b/Getting-Started.md index 1589423..a596bcb 100644 --- a/Getting-Started.md +++ b/Getting-Started.md @@ -69,13 +69,13 @@ This command would recursively upload all files. Or you can specify what files y Then, you can simply check "du -m -s /some/big/folder" to see the actual disk usage by OS, and compare it with the file size under "/data". Usually if you are uploading a lot of textual files, the consumed disk size would be much smaller since textual files are gzipped automatically. -Now you can use your tools to hit weed-fs as hard as you can. +Now you can use your tools to hit SeaweedFS as hard as you can. ## Using SeaweedFS in docker You can use image "cydev/weed" or build your own with [dockerfile][] in the root of repo. -[dockerfile]: https://github.com/chrislusf/weed-fs/blob/master/Dockerfile +[dockerfile]: https://github.com/chrislusf/seaweedfs/blob/master/Dockerfile ### Using pre-built Docker image @@ -97,10 +97,10 @@ curl "http://$IP:9333/cluster/status?pretty=y" ### Building image from dockerfile -Make a local copy of weed-fs from github +Make a local copy of seaweedfs from github ```bash -git clone https://github.com/chrislusf/weed-fs.git +git clone https://github.com/chrislusf/seaweedfs.git ``` Minimal Image (~19.6 MB) @@ -128,5 +128,5 @@ docker run --name weed -d -p 9333:9333 -p 8080:8080 \ -publicIp="$(curl -s cydev.ru/ip)" ``` -Now our weed-fs server will be persistent and accessible by localhost:9333 and :8080 on host machine. +Now our SeaweedFS server will be persistent and accessible by localhost:9333 and :8080 on host machine. Dont forget to specify "-publicIp" for correct connectivity. \ No newline at end of file