Add AWS resource tags to a Storage Lens dashboard - Amazon Simple Storage Service

Add AWS resource tags to a Storage Lens dashboard

The following examples demonstrate how to add AWS resource tags to an S3 Storage Lens dashboard. You can add resource tags by using the Amazon S3 console, AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI), and AWS SDK for Java.

To add AWS resource tags to a Storage Lens dashboard
  1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the Amazon S3 console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/s3/.

  2. In the left navigation pane, navigate to Storage Lens on the left navigation panel.

  3. Choose Dashboards.

  4. Choose the radio button for the Storage Lens dashboard that you want to update. Then, choose Edit.

  5. Under General, choose Add tag.

  6. On the Add tag page, add the new key-value pair.

    Note

    Adding a new tag with the same key as an existing tag overwrites the previous tag value.

  7. (Optional) To add more than one new tag, choose Add tag again to continue adding new entries. You can add up to 50 AWS resource tags to your Storage Lens dashboard.

  8. (Optional) If you want to remove a newly added entry, choose Remove next to the tag that you want to remove.

  9. Choose Save changes.

The following example command adds tags to a S3 Storage Lens dashboard configuration. To use these examples, replace the user input placeholders with your own information.

aws s3control put-storage-lens-configuration-tagging --account-id=222222222222 --region=us-east-1 --config-id=your-configuration-id --tags=file://./tags.json

The following example adds tags to an Amazon S3 Storage Lens configuration in SDK for Java. To use this example, replace the user input placeholders with your own information.

Example – Add tags to an S3 Storage Lens configuration
package aws.example.s3control; import com.amazonaws.AmazonServiceException; import com.amazonaws.SdkClientException; import com.amazonaws.auth.profile.ProfileCredentialsProvider; import com.amazonaws.services.s3control.AWSS3Control; import com.amazonaws.services.s3control.AWSS3ControlClient; import com.amazonaws.services.s3control.model.PutStorageLensConfigurationTaggingRequest; import com.amazonaws.services.s3control.model.StorageLensTag; import java.util.Arrays; import java.util.List; import static com.amazonaws.regions.Regions.US_WEST_2; public class PutDashboardTagging { public static void main(String[] args) { String configurationId = "ConfigurationId"; String sourceAccountId = "111122223333"; try { List<StorageLensTag> tags = Arrays.asList( new StorageLensTag().withKey("key-1").withValue("value-1"), new StorageLensTag().withKey("key-2").withValue("value-2") ); AWSS3Control s3ControlClient = AWSS3ControlClient.builder() .withCredentials(new ProfileCredentialsProvider()) .withRegion(US_WEST_2) .build(); s3ControlClient.putStorageLensConfigurationTagging(new PutStorageLensConfigurationTaggingRequest() .withAccountId(sourceAccountId) .withConfigId(configurationId) .withTags(tags) ); } catch (AmazonServiceException e) { // The call was transmitted successfully, but Amazon S3 couldn't process // it and returned an error response. e.printStackTrace(); } catch (SdkClientException e) { // Amazon S3 couldn't be contacted for a response, or the client // couldn't parse the response from Amazon S3. e.printStackTrace(); } } }