File Storage
File storage for application containers
Galaxy provides temporary file storage for application containers to use. Galaxy does not provide persistent file storage for application containers to use.
If you need persistent file storage for your application, you should use a robust cloud storage solution like Amazon S3.
With each container, you should be able to use up to 512 MB of disk space for temporary local file storage.
Application containers are given read/write access to the /tmp directory and /tmp sub-directories. Application containers do not have read/write access to the /root directory or to the $HOME directory.
In your application, when deploying to Galaxy, ensure that no package or application code tries to write to the /root directory on the local filesystem.
Galaxy provides temporary file storage for application containers to use. Galaxy does not provide persistent file storage for application containers to use.
If you need persistent file storage for your application, you should use a robust cloud storage solution like Amazon S3.
With each container, you should be able to use up to 512 MB of disk space for temporary local file storage.
Application containers are given read/write access to the /tmp directory and /tmp sub-directories. Application containers do not have read/write access to the /root directory or to the $HOME directory.
In your application, when deploying to Galaxy, ensure that no package or application code tries to write to the /root directory on the local filesystem.
Updated on: 15/07/2024
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