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OSS Web-based File Management?

breadiu asks: "I work for a department at a university, and we'd love to offer students some type of web-accessible file storage, but, like most educational institutions, money is tight. There are some great closed source solutions out there like Xythos' Digital Locker Suite, but those cost. I've had trouble finding a really well put together open source solution. I've taken a look at Slide and even Zope, but neither really match up to Xythos' offerings. What have others done to provide centralized file storage/management? Is there anything OSS that offers WebDAV, Apache support, BSD/Linux support and Active Directory-LDAP authentication with support for Windows and Mac clients?"

7 of 320 comments (clear)

  1. Answered own question by DrZaius · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Maybe I don't understand the problem:

    Is there anything OSS that offers WebDAV, Apache support, BSD/Linux support and Active Directory-LDAP authentication with support for Windows and Mac clients?

    Doesn't Apache + mod_webdav + auth_ldap support all of this? Can't you just point any webdav client at apache and have web based file storage?

    If you want normal people to access it, put up a web page with instructions on how to access it.

    --
    -- DrZaius - Minister of Sciences and Protector of the Faith
    1. Re:Answered own question by rhizome · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Doesn't Apache + mod_webdav + auth_ldap support all of this?

      Yes it does. This is a stupid article.

      --
      When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
    2. Re:Answered own question by masukomi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You have to install and configure an ldap server (know how to administer it), recompile apache, and know what the hell mod_webdav (or even webdav) is in the first place.

      How many non programmer people do YOU know who can do that?

      So NO, it isn't a stupid article. But your response is a great example of one of the underlying problems in the OSS community: developers tend to forget that the rest of the world isn't made up of developers.

    3. Re:Answered own question by mborland · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I would like to complain about the previous complaint.

      I agree that the guy that said 'stupid article' was a little blunt, but I think it's fair for readers of Ask Slashdot to complain when topics are at the level of 'how do I tie my own shoe?' I have no problem with someone asking for help--there are no stupid questions--but this doesn't seem like the forum for this kind of question (front page, etc.).

      I didn't get your point about technical complexity. The sysadmin/programmer's job is to understand these technologies (they listed WebDAV, & Apache in the posting after all), and the end users in this case hardly need to know anything (they just map drives or whatever, same as any other solution).

    4. Re:Answered own question by soward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      not really. Apache+mod_webdav does generally provide that functionality, but not on a per-user basis. Say you've got a school with 20,000 students. To make Apache+mod_dav work you'd need 20,000 entries in the httpd.conf. Plus it all will still run as your www user, so folx couldn't access these files through any method other than WebDAV and keep things like permissions intact.

      WebDAV is nifty in that there are client implementations built-in to most common OSes. It's also nice because it runs through most firewalls since it's built on top of HTTP. It's not so great at some things, though...speed can be an issue, resource usage on the server another, metadata concerns come up occasionally.

      Hence a nice solution would allow WebDAV access when appropriate, and other types (e.g. SMB, AFP, NFS, local, etc) when needed.

      So I don't think it's a stupid question at all -- just not asked very clearly.

      We are working on a custom DAV service to accomodate this sort of usage currently, so if there is a way to use mod_dav, have it query an ldap server to log a user in, and have it read and write files to the local filesystem as that particular uid (under unix), and do so with a single config file entry for all users, please post a link to it!

      --
      John Soward...University of Kentucky
  2. Write Your Own by Comatose51 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't want to sound like one of those guys who always go, "If you don't like it, change it." but you're in a good position to do that because of the academic setting. Make it a project for Comp Sci students or grad. students. It'll be good practice for them in managing real world projects and an good intro to open source development/philosophy. OSS seems in line with the open philosophy of academia. Find a project that does almost what you want and extend it.

    --
    EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
  3. Re:priorities by Danger+Stevens · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's barbaric when it happens in London, but when it happens constantly in Israel you don't even blink.

    Bombs in London are barbaric but rape victims having no legal protection in Saudi Arabia doesn't bother you.

    There's a Genocide happening in Sudan - what have you done to stop it?

    Read tech news, get smart, get power, and use it all to go do some fucking good in this world.

    --
    World Changing - News for Humans, Stuff about our planet