Can you post some examples. I could use this myself but I never got a 
chance tot try it.

On Saturday, 12 May 2012 13:58:01 UTC-5, Nils Olofsson wrote:
>
> Amazon's S3 is ideal for this, I use it I mount s3 using fuse interface.
> Works pretty well for me.
> Nils
> On May 12, 2012 7:53 PM, "Sebastian E. Ovide" <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>
>> just wondering... (I know that it is not a normal application)... where 
>> would you store a couple of millions pictures of less than 60K each ?
>>
>>
>> On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 2:04 AM, Massimo Di Pierro <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Oops. Sorry. I read it in a hurry.
>>>
>>> I would not use the file system for something like this. Anyway, upload 
>>> separate creates up to 1296 subfolder per table.field. This number can be 
>>> increased.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Friday, 11 May 2012 18:33:22 UTC-5, Anthony wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Friday, May 11, 2012 7:25:21 PM UTC-4, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> yes.
>>>>>
>>>>> Field('name','upload',**uploadseparate=True)
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> He's aware of that but seems to think that one level of sub-folders 
>>>> won't be enough (he's expecting millions of files, so still more than 1000 
>>>> files per sub-folder, even with uploadseparate=True).
>>>>
>>>> I don't think web2py includes any out-of-the-box solution for 
>>>> generating deeper levels of sub-folders for uploaded files. Maybe subclass 
>>>> Field for that upload field and roll your own .store() and .retrieve() 
>>>> methods.
>>>>
>>>> Anthony
>>>>
>>>>
>>
>>
>> -- 
>> Sebastian E. Ovide
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>  

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