A lightweight server clone of Azure Blob, Queue, and Table Storage that simulates most of the commands supported by it with minimal dependencies.
Dear Azurite community, many thanks for your interest and support.
We thought we might be able to reduce some of our testing overhead by incorporating the Azure Storage Node tests in the dev pipeline, but that just showed us how far we really had to go.
We were struggling to maintain parity with our APIs, community contributions were growing, as was our number of issues.
To fix this, we have been focusing on the completion of a new more easily maintainable architecture for Azurite, using Typescript and automatically generated interfaces.
The plan is to implement blob storage, followed by table storage, then queues. Each with persistent storage.
Contributors and maintainers can then focus on emulation and simulation of storage behaviour, rather than reverse engineering our APIs and API documentation.
The blob API work should be completed in the next couple of months, with the rest following on close behind.
In order to run Azurite you need Node.js >= 6.0 installed on your system. Azurite works cross-platform on Windows, Linux, and OS X.
After installation you can install Azurite simply with npm
which is Node.js package management tool and which is included with every Node.js installation.
$ npm install -g azurite
Simply start it with the following command:
$ azurite -l path/to/localfolder
This tells Azurite to store all data in a particular directory. If the -l
option is ommitted it will use the current working directory. This also will start both blob storage and queue storage emulation in two different processes.
You can also selectively start the different storage emulators.
For Blob Storage Emulator only:
$ azurite-blob -l path/to/azurite/workspace
For Queue Storage Emulator only:
$ azurite-queue
For Table Storage Emulator only:
$ azurite-table -l path/to/azurite/workspace
Azurite is also available as Nuget package at https://www.nuget.org/packages/Azurite/. You can install it via the Package Manager Console with the following command:
PM> Install-Package Azurite
This will install Azurite to your current project and also immediately start it in a dedicated console window. Note that you do not need to install Node.js since Azurite is packaged into a single self-contained executable, thanks to pkg.
Every release of Azurite starting with version 0.9.7 is available at Docker Hub and ready to be pulled with:
$ docker pull arafato/azurite
Please note that the latest
tag will always refer to the latest release.
To build the Docker image yourself, execute the following:
$ docker build -t arafato/azurite .
To run the Docker image, execute the following command:
$ docker run -d -t -p 10000:10000 -p 10001:10001 -p 10002:10002 -v /path/to/folder:/opt/azurite/folder arafato/azurite
By default, the container starts all services available (currently blob, queue, and table).
Using the environment variable executable
, specific executables can be specifed:
blob
Start the Blob Storage Emulator onlyqueue
Start the Azure Queue Storage Emulator onlytable
Start the Azure Table Storage Emulator only
$ docker run -e executable=blob -d -t -p 10000:10000 -v /path/to/folder:/opt/azurite/folder arafato/azurite
To perform blob storage operations using the 2.0 Azure cross-platform CLI, you need to operate with the appropriate connection string. The values within are based on the hardcoded Azure Storage Emulator values.
Example command to create a container:
$ az storage container create --name 'test' --connection-string 'DefaultEndpointsProtocol=http;AccountName=devstoreaccount1;AccountKey=Eby8vdM02xNOcqFlqUwJPLlmEtlCDXJ1OUzFT50uSRZ6IFsuFq2UVErCz4I6tq/K1SZFPTOtr/KBHBeksoGMGw==;BlobEndpoint=http://127.0.0.1:10000/devstoreaccount1;'
{
"created": true
}
The Shared Key Credential account and access key is
ACCOUNT_NAME: devstoreaccount1
ACCOUNT_ACCESS_KEY: Eby8vdM02xNOcqFlqUwJPLlmEtlCDXJ1OUzFT50uSRZ6IFsuFq2UVErCz4I6tq/K1SZFPTOtr/KBHBeksoGMGw==
-a
Enables sharedkey authentication check
-l c:\tmp\emulatorPath
--location c:\tmp\emulatorPath
Allows the specification of a path
--blobPort 101000
Sets the TCP Port for blob storage to the value following the argument.
--queuePort 10001
Sets the TCP Port for queue storage to the value following the argument.
--tablePort 10002
Sets the TCP Port for table storage to the value following the argument.
If you are interested in making a code contribution and would like to learn more about the technologies that we use, check out the list below.
- Azurite runs on Node.js. If you never worked with this technology before make sure to get yourself familiar with it. There are many good tutorials out there along with a comprehensive API documentation that will get you up to speed quickly! We are currently coding against Node.js v8.9.4 LTS
- Azurite exposes its REST-based API via Express.js which is a "fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for Node.js.
- Azurite uses LokiJS which is an in-memory data store with persistence. It serves as our central database to store metadata (names, properties, leases, etc.) about all objects put into Azurite.
- Azurite makes heavy use of Bluebird which is a fully featured promises library with unmatched performance.
We are using a combination of community feedback, and the Azure Storage Node package tests to validate Azurite's support of the Official Blob Storage REST API Specification.
We shall create issues based on failing tests to help direct and prioritize our development efforts.
See also section below: API Support.
Current bugs that need to be fixed are listed at our issues site on Github and tagged with a red label bug
.
Issues which we think might be a good place for newcomers to start, are tagged with "good first issue".
Details on how to setup tests with the Azure Storage submodule, can be found under Testing with Azure Storage Node.
Be sure to check out the Microsoft Azure Developer Forums on MSDN or the Developer Forums on Stack Overflow if you have trouble with the provided code.
If you would like to become an active contributor to this project please follow the instructions provided in Azure Projects Contribution Guidelines.
If you encounter any bugs with the library please file an issue in the Issues section of the project.
When sending pull requests, please send non-breaking PRs to the dev branch and breaking changes to the dev_breaking branch. Please do not make PRs against master.
- Please include a Unit or Integration test with any code submission, this is a significant help when validating changes and helps reduce the time we need to spend on pull requests.
If you need help, you can ask questions directly at our issues site on Github.
Alternatively, check out the following links:
Azure Developer Center
Azure Storage Service
Azure Storage Team Blog
Currently, Azurite only supports the Blob Storage APIs, the Queue Storage API, and the Table Storage API.
Support for Azure Storage Files is planned, but currently not available.
The Standard Emulator Connection String is the same as required by Microsoft's Official Storage Emulator:
BlobEndpoint=http://127.0.0.1:10000/devstoreaccount1;
QueueEndpoint=http://127.0.0.1:10001/devstoreaccount1;
TableEndpoint=http://127.0.0.1:10002/devstoreaccount1;
All DONE except:
-
Account SAS Support [TODO]
See https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/rest/api/storageservices/constructing-an-account-sas for specification -
Get Blob Service Stats [TODO]
Retrieves statistics related to replication for the Blob service. This operation is only available on the secondary location endpoint when read-access geo-redundant replication is enabled for the storage account. -
Set Blob Tier [TODO] The Set Blob Tier operation sets the tier on a blob.
All DONE.
ALL DONE except:
- Get Table ACL [TODO]
- Set Table ACL [TODO]
- Entity Group Transaction (Batch Operation) [TODO]