Transactional File LockingΒΆ
Nextcloud’s Transactional File Locking mechanism locks files to avoid file corruption during normal operation. It performs these functions:
- Operates at a higher level than the filesystem, so you don’t need to use a filesystem that supports locking
- Locks parent directories so they cannot be renamed during any activity on files inside the directories
- Releases locks after file transactions are interrupted, for example when a sync client loses the connection during an upload
- Manages locking and releasing locks correctly on shared files during changes from multiple users
- Manages locks correctly on external storage mounts
- Manages encrypted files correctly
What Transactional File locking is not for: it will not prevent multiple users from editing the same document, or give notice that other users are working on the same document. Multiple users can open and edit a file at the same time and Transactional File locking does not prevent this. Rather, it prevents simultaneous file saving.
File locking is enabled by default, using the database locking backend. This
places a significant load on your database. Using memcache.locking
relieves
the database load and improves performance. Admins of Nextcloud servers with
heavy workloads should install a memcache. (See
Configuring Memory Caching.)
To use a memcache with Transactional File Locking, you must install the Redis
server and corresponding PHP module. After installing Redis you must enter a
configuration in your config.php
file like this example:
'filelocking.enabled' => true,
'memcache.locking' => '\OC\Memcache\Redis',
'redis' => array(
'host' => 'localhost',
'port' => 6379,
'timeout' => 0.0,
'password' => '', // Optional, if not defined no password will be used.
),
Note
For enhanced security it is recommended to configure Redis to require a password. See http://redis.io/topics/security for more information.
If you want to configure Redis to listen on an Unix socket (which is
recommended if Redis is running on the same system as Nextcloud) use this example
config.php
configuration:
'filelocking.enabled' => true,
'memcache.locking' => '\OC\Memcache\Redis',
'redis' => array(
'host' => '/var/run/redis/redis.sock',
'port' => 0,
'timeout' => 0.0,
),
See config.sample.php
to see configuration examples for Redis, and for all
supported memcaches.
If you are on Ubuntu you can follow this guide for a complete installation from scratch.
Learn more about Reds at Redis. Memcached, the popular distributed memory caching system, is not suitable for the new file locking because it is not designed to store locks, and data can disappear from the cache at any time. Redis is a key-value store, and it guarantees that cached objects are available for as long as they are needed.
Debian Jesse users, please see this Github discussion if you have problems with LDAP authentication.