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'''MinIO''' is a High-Performance Object Storage released under GNU Affero General Public License v3.0. It is API compatible with the [[Amazon S3]] cloud storage service. It can handle unstructured data such as photos, videos, log files, backups, and container images with a current maximum supported object size of |
'''MinIO''' is a High-Performance Object Storage released under GNU Affero General Public License v3.0. It is API compatible with the [[Amazon S3]] cloud storage service. It can handle unstructured data such as photos, videos, log files, backups, and container images with a current maximum supported object size of 50TB.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://min.io/docs/minio/linux/operations/checklists/thresholds.html#minio-server-limits|title=Minio documentation. Thresholds and Limits}}</ref> |
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== History & development == |
== History & development == |
Revision as of 15:07, 24 July 2023
This article contains promotional content. (September 2019) |
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines for companies and organizations. (September 2021) |
Developer(s) | MinIO, Inc |
---|---|
Initial release | 11 March 2016[1] |
Stable release | 2024-02-14T21-36-02Z[2]
/ 14 February 2024 |
Repository | |
Written in | Go |
Type | Object storage |
License | GNU Affero GPL |
Website | min |
MinIO is a High-Performance Object Storage released under GNU Affero General Public License v3.0. It is API compatible with the Amazon S3 cloud storage service. It can handle unstructured data such as photos, videos, log files, backups, and container images with a current maximum supported object size of 50TB.[3]
History & development
MinIO's main developer is MinIO Inc, a Silicon Valley–based technology startup founded by Anand Babu Periasamy, Garima Kapoor, and Harshavardhana in November 2014.[citation needed]
MinIO has published a number of benchmarks to disclose both its own performance and the performance of an object storage in general, those include comparisons to an Amazon S3 for Trino, Presto, and Spark as well as throughput results for the S3Benchmark on HDD and NVMe drives.[4][5]
Re-licensing
As of April 23, 2021 MinIO, Inc submitted a change that re-licensed the project from its previous Apache V2 to GNU Affero Public License Version 3 (AGPLv3).[6].
Architecture
MinIO storage stack has three major components: MinIO Server, MinIO Client (a.k.a. mc
, which is a command-line client for the object and file management with any Amazon S3 compatible servers), and MinIO Client SDK that can be used by application developers to interact with any Amazon S3 compatible server.
MinIO Server
MinIO cloud storage server is designed to be minimal and scalable. It is light enough to be bundled along with the application stack, similar to NodeJS, and Redis.
MinIO is optimized for large enterprise deployments, including features like erasure coding, bitrot protection, encryption/WORM, identity management, continuous replication, global federation, and multi-cloud deployments via gateway mode.
MinIO server is hardware agnostic, thus it can be installed both on physical and virtual machines or launched as Docker containers and deployed on container orchestration platforms like Kubernetes.[7]
MinIO Client
MinIO Client provides an alternative to the standard UNIX commands (e.g. ls
, cat
, cp
, mirror
, diff
, etc.) adding support for an Amazon S3 compatible cloud storage services. It works on Linux, Mac and Windows platforms.[8]
MinIO Client SDK
MinIO Client SDK provides an API to access any Amazon S3 compatible object storage server.[9][failed verification] Language bindings are available for Go, Java, Python, JavaScript, Haskell, and languages hosted on top of the .NET Framework.
References
- ^ "minio/minio at RELEASE.2016-03-11T03-45-50Z". GitHub.
- ^ "Bugfix release".
- ^ "Minio documentation. Thresholds and Limits".
- ^ Mellor, Chris (2019-07-24). "Traditional file and block storage vendors are toast – Minio". blocksandfiles.com. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
- ^ "MinIO fires fresh salvo in object storage speed wars". 13 November 2019.
- ^ "Update license change for MinIO · minio/Minio@0694325". GitHub.
- ^ "Hyperscale ML with Kubeflow, MinIO, TensorFlow and Diamanti". 14 November 2020.
- ^ "MinIO Quickstart Guide". GitHub. 20 November 2021.
- ^ Nicolas, Philippe (2016-07-15). "The History Boys: Object storage ... from the beginning". The Register.