Class: Aws::S3::Client
- Inherits:
-
Seahorse::Client::Base
- Object
- Seahorse::Client::Base
- Aws::S3::Client
- Includes:
- ClientStubs
- Defined in:
- gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb
Overview
An API client for S3. To construct a client, you need to configure a :region
and :credentials
.
client = Aws::S3::Client.new(
region: region_name,
credentials: credentials,
# ...
)
For details on configuring region and credentials see the developer guide.
See #initialize for a full list of supported configuration options.
Instance Attribute Summary
Attributes inherited from Seahorse::Client::Base
API Operations collapse
-
#abort_multipart_upload(params = {}) ⇒ Types::AbortMultipartUploadOutput
This operation aborts a multipart upload.
-
#complete_multipart_upload(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CompleteMultipartUploadOutput
Completes a multipart upload by assembling previously uploaded parts.
-
#copy_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CopyObjectOutput
Creates a copy of an object that is already stored in Amazon S3.
-
#create_bucket(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateBucketOutput
This action creates an Amazon S3 bucket. -
#create_multipart_upload(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateMultipartUploadOutput
This action initiates a multipart upload and returns an upload ID.
-
#create_session(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateSessionOutput
Creates a session that establishes temporary security credentials to support fast authentication and authorization for the Zonal endpoint API operations on directory buckets.
-
#delete_bucket(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the S3 bucket.
-
#delete_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_cors(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_encryption(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This implementation of the DELETE action resets the default encryption for the bucket as server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3).
-
#delete_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_policy(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the policy of a specified bucket.
-
#delete_bucket_replication(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_bucket_website(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DeleteObjectOutput
Removes an object from a bucket.
-
#delete_object_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DeleteObjectTaggingOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#delete_objects(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DeleteObjectsOutput
This operation enables you to delete multiple objects from a bucket using a single HTTP request.
-
#delete_public_access_block(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_accelerate_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketAccelerateConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketAclOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketAnalyticsConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_cors(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketCorsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_encryption(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketEncryptionOutput
Returns the default encryption configuration for an Amazon S3 bucket.
-
#get_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketInventoryConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLifecycleOutput
For an updated version of this API, see [GetBucketLifecycleConfiguration][1].
-
#get_bucket_lifecycle_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLifecycleConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_location(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLocationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_logging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLoggingOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketMetricsConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_notification(params = {}) ⇒ Types::NotificationConfigurationDeprecated
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_notification_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::NotificationConfiguration
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketOwnershipControlsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_policy(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketPolicyOutput
Returns the policy of a specified bucket.
-
#get_bucket_policy_status(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketPolicyStatusOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_replication(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketReplicationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_request_payment(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketRequestPaymentOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketTaggingOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_versioning(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketVersioningOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_bucket_website(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketWebsiteOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectOutput
Retrieves an object from Amazon S3.
-
#get_object_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectAclOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_object_attributes(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectAttributesOutput
Retrieves all the metadata from an object without returning the object itself.
-
#get_object_legal_hold(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectLegalHoldOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_object_lock_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectLockConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_object_retention(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectRetentionOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_object_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectTaggingOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_object_torrent(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectTorrentOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#get_public_access_block(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetPublicAccessBlockOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#head_bucket(params = {}) ⇒ Types::HeadBucketOutput
You can use this operation to determine if a bucket exists and if you have permission to access it.
-
#head_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::HeadObjectOutput
The
HEAD
operation retrieves metadata from an object without returning the object itself. -
#list_bucket_analytics_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketAnalyticsConfigurationsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurationsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_bucket_inventory_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketInventoryConfigurationsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_bucket_metrics_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketMetricsConfigurationsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_buckets(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_directory_buckets(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListDirectoryBucketsOutput
Returns a list of all Amazon S3 directory buckets owned by the authenticated sender of the request.
-
#list_multipart_uploads(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListMultipartUploadsOutput
This operation lists in-progress multipart uploads in a bucket.
-
#list_object_versions(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListObjectVersionsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_objects(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListObjectsOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#list_objects_v2(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListObjectsV2Output
Returns some or all (up to 1,000) of the objects in a bucket with each request.
-
#list_parts(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListPartsOutput
Lists the parts that have been uploaded for a specific multipart upload.
-
#put_bucket_accelerate_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_cors(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_encryption(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation configures default encryption and Amazon S3 Bucket Keys for an existing bucket.
-
#put_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_lifecycle_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutBucketLifecycleConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_logging(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_notification(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_notification_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_policy(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Applies an Amazon S3 bucket policy to an Amazon S3 bucket.
-
#put_bucket_replication(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_request_payment(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_versioning(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_bucket_website(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectOutput
Adds an object to a bucket.
-
#put_object_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectAclOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_object_legal_hold(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectLegalHoldOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_object_lock_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectLockConfigurationOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_object_retention(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectRetentionOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_object_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectTaggingOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#put_public_access_block(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#restore_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::RestoreObjectOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#select_object_content(params = {}) ⇒ Types::SelectObjectContentOutput
This operation is not supported by directory buckets. -
#upload_part(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UploadPartOutput
Uploads a part in a multipart upload.
-
#upload_part_copy(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UploadPartCopyOutput
Uploads a part by copying data from an existing object as data source.
-
#write_get_object_response(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation is not supported by directory buckets.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#initialize(options) ⇒ Client
constructor
A new instance of Client.
-
#wait_until(waiter_name, params = {}, options = {}) {|w.waiter| ... } ⇒ Boolean
Polls an API operation until a resource enters a desired state.
Methods included from ClientStubs
#api_requests, #stub_data, #stub_responses
Methods inherited from Seahorse::Client::Base
add_plugin, api, clear_plugins, define, new, #operation_names, plugins, remove_plugin, set_api, set_plugins
Methods included from Seahorse::Client::HandlerBuilder
#handle, #handle_request, #handle_response
Constructor Details
#initialize(options) ⇒ Client
Returns a new instance of Client.
551 552 553 |
# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 551 def initialize(*args) super end |
Instance Method Details
#abort_multipart_upload(params = {}) ⇒ Types::AbortMultipartUploadOutput
This operation aborts a multipart upload. After a multipart upload is aborted, no additional parts can be uploaded using that upload ID. The storage consumed by any previously uploaded parts will be freed. However, if any part uploads are currently in progress, those part uploads might or might not succeed. As a result, it might be necessary to abort a given multipart upload multiple times in order to completely free all storage consumed by all parts.
To verify that all parts have been removed and prevent getting charged for the part storage, you should call the ListParts API operation and ensure that the parts list is empty.
ListMultipartUploads
operation to list the in-progress multipart uploads in the bucket
and use the AbortMultupartUpload
operation to abort all the
in-progress multipart uploads.
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make
requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These
endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - For information about permissions required to use the multipart upload, see Multipart Upload and Permissions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to AbortMultipartUpload
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 743 def abort_multipart_upload(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:abort_multipart_upload, params) req.send_request() end |
#complete_multipart_upload(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CompleteMultipartUploadOutput
Completes a multipart upload by assembling previously uploaded parts.
You first initiate the multipart upload and then upload all parts
using the UploadPart operation or the UploadPartCopy
operation. After successfully uploading all relevant parts of an
upload, you call this CompleteMultipartUpload
operation to complete
the upload. Upon receiving this request, Amazon S3 concatenates all
the parts in ascending order by part number to create a new object. In
the CompleteMultipartUpload request, you must provide the parts list
and ensure that the parts list is complete. The
CompleteMultipartUpload API operation concatenates the parts that you
provide in the list. For each part in the list, you must provide the
PartNumber
value and the ETag
value that are returned after that
part was uploaded.
The processing of a CompleteMultipartUpload request could take several
minutes to finalize. After Amazon S3 begins processing the request, it
sends an HTTP response header that specifies a 200 OK
response.
While processing is in progress, Amazon S3 periodically sends white
space characters to keep the connection from timing out. A request
could fail after the initial 200 OK
response has been sent. This
means that a 200 OK
response can contain either a success or an
error. The error response might be embedded in the 200 OK
response.
If you call this API operation directly, make sure to design your
application to parse the contents of the response and handle it
appropriately. If you use Amazon Web Services SDKs, SDKs handle this
condition. The SDKs detect the embedded error and apply error handling
per your configuration settings (including automatically retrying the
request as appropriate). If the condition persists, the SDKs throw an
exception (or, for the SDKs that don't use exceptions, they return an
error).
Note that if CompleteMultipartUpload
fails, applications should be
prepared to retry any failed requests (including 500 error responses).
For more information, see Amazon S3 Error Best Practices.
You can't use Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
for
the CompleteMultipartUpload requests. Also, if you don't provide a
Content-Type
header, CompleteMultipartUpload
can still return a
200 OK
response.
For more information about multipart uploads, see Uploading Objects Using Multipart Upload in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - For information about permissions required to use the multipart upload API, see Multipart Upload and Permissions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
If you provide an additional checksum value in your
MultipartUpload
requests and the object is encrypted with Key Management Service, you must have permission to use thekms:Decrypt
action for theCompleteMultipartUpload
request to succeed.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.If the object is encrypted with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.
- Special errors
Error Code:
EntityTooSmall
Description: Your proposed upload is smaller than the minimum allowed object size. Each part must be at least 5 MB in size, except the last part.
HTTP Status Code: 400 Bad Request
Error Code:
InvalidPart
Description: One or more of the specified parts could not be found. The part might not have been uploaded, or the specified ETag might not have matched the uploaded part's ETag.
HTTP Status Code: 400 Bad Request
Error Code:
InvalidPartOrder
Description: The list of parts was not in ascending order. The parts list must be specified in order by part number.
HTTP Status Code: 400 Bad Request
Error Code:
NoSuchUpload
Description: The specified multipart upload does not exist. The upload ID might be invalid, or the multipart upload might have been aborted or completed.
HTTP Status Code: 404 Not Found
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to CompleteMultipartUpload
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 1177 def complete_multipart_upload(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:complete_multipart_upload, params) req.send_request() end |
#copy_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CopyObjectOutput
Creates a copy of an object that is already stored in Amazon S3.
You can copy individual objects between general purpose buckets, between directory buckets, and between general purpose buckets and directory buckets.
Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.VPC endpoints don't support cross-Region requests (including copies). If you're using VPC endpoints, your source and destination buckets should be in the same Amazon Web Services Region as your VPC endpoint.
Both the Region that you want to copy the object from and the Region that you want to copy the object to must be enabled for your account. For more information about how to enable a Region for your account, see Enable or disable a Region for standalone accounts in the Amazon Web Services Account Management Guide.
Amazon S3 transfer acceleration does not support cross-Region copies.
If you request a cross-Region copy using a transfer acceleration
endpoint, you get a 400 Bad Request
error. For more information, see
Transfer Acceleration.
- Authentication and authorization
All
CopyObject
requests must be authenticated and signed by using IAM credentials (access key ID and secret access key for the IAM identities). All headers with thex-amz-
prefix, includingx-amz-copy-source
, must be signed. For more information, see REST Authentication.Directory buckets - You must use the IAM credentials to authenticate and authorize your access to the
CopyObject
API operation, instead of using the temporary security credentials through theCreateSession
API operation.Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs handles authentication and authorization on your behalf.
- Permissions
You must have read access to the source object and write access to the destination bucket.
General purpose bucket permissions - You must have permissions in an IAM policy based on the source and destination bucket types in a
CopyObject
operation.If the source object is in a general purpose bucket, you must have
s3:GetObject
permission to read the source object that is being copied.If the destination bucket is a general purpose bucket, you must have
s3:PutObject
permission to write the object copy to the destination bucket.
Directory bucket permissions - You must have permissions in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy based on the source and destination bucket types in a
CopyObject
operation.If the source object that you want to copy is in a directory bucket, you must have the
s3express:CreateSession
permission in theAction
element of a policy to read the object. By default, the session is in theReadWrite
mode. If you want to restrict the access, you can explicitly set thes3express:SessionMode
condition key toReadOnly
on the copy source bucket.If the copy destination is a directory bucket, you must have the
s3express:CreateSession
permission in theAction
element of a policy to write the object to the destination. Thes3express:SessionMode
condition key can't be set toReadOnly
on the copy destination bucket.
If the object is encrypted with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.For example policies, see Example bucket policies for S3 Express One Zone and Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) identity-based policies for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Response and special errors
When the request is an HTTP 1.1 request, the response is chunk encoded. When the request is not an HTTP 1.1 request, the response would not contain the
Content-Length
. You always need to read the entire response body to check if the copy succeeds.If the copy is successful, you receive a response with information about the copied object.
A copy request might return an error when Amazon S3 receives the copy request or while Amazon S3 is copying the files. A
200 OK
response can contain either a success or an error.If the error occurs before the copy action starts, you receive a standard Amazon S3 error.
If the error occurs during the copy operation, the error response is embedded in the
200 OK
response. For example, in a cross-region copy, you may encounter throttling and receive a200 OK
response. For more information, see Resolve the Error 200 response when copying objects to Amazon S3. The200 OK
status code means the copy was accepted, but it doesn't mean the copy is complete. Another example is when you disconnect from Amazon S3 before the copy is complete, Amazon S3 might cancel the copy and you may receive a200 OK
response. You must stay connected to Amazon S3 until the entire response is successfully received and processed.If you call this API operation directly, make sure to design your application to parse the content of the response and handle it appropriately. If you use Amazon Web Services SDKs, SDKs handle this condition. The SDKs detect the embedded error and apply error handling per your configuration settings (including automatically retrying the request as appropriate). If the condition persists, the SDKs throw an exception (or, for the SDKs that don't use exceptions, they return an error).
- Charge
The copy request charge is based on the storage class and Region that you specify for the destination object. The request can also result in a data retrieval charge for the source if the source storage class bills for data retrieval. If the copy source is in a different region, the data transfer is billed to the copy source account. For pricing information, see Amazon S3 pricing.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to CopyObject
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 2222 def copy_object(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:copy_object, params) req.send_request() end |
#create_bucket(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateBucketOutput
CreateBucket
.
Creates a new S3 bucket. To create a bucket, you must set up Amazon S3 and have a valid Amazon Web Services Access Key ID to authenticate requests. Anonymous requests are never allowed to create buckets. By creating the bucket, you become the bucket owner.
There are two types of buckets: general purpose buckets and directory buckets. For more information about these bucket types, see Creating, configuring, and working with Amazon S3 buckets in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
CreateBucket
request to the s3.amazonaws.com
global endpoint, the request goes
to the us-east-1
Region. So the signature calculations in
Signature Version 4 must use us-east-1
as the Region, even if the
location constraint in the request specifies another Region where
the bucket is to be created. If you create a bucket in a Region
other than US East (N. Virginia), your application must be able to
handle 307 redirect. For more information, see Virtual hosting of
buckets in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make
requests for this API operation to the Regional endpoint. These
endpoints support path-style requests in the format
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
. Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - In addition to the
s3:CreateBucket
permission, the following permissions are required in a policy when yourCreateBucket
request includes specific headers:Access control lists (ACLs) - In your
CreateBucket
request, if you specify an access control list (ACL) and set it topublic-read
,public-read-write
,authenticated-read
, or if you explicitly specify any other custom ACLs, boths3:CreateBucket
ands3:PutBucketAcl
permissions are required. In yourCreateBucket
request, if you set the ACL toprivate
, or if you don't specify any ACLs, only thes3:CreateBucket
permission is required.Object Lock - In your
CreateBucket
request, if you setx-amz-bucket-object-lock-enabled
to true, thes3:PutBucketObjectLockConfiguration
ands3:PutBucketVersioning
permissions are required.S3 Object Ownership - If your
CreateBucket
request includes thex-amz-object-ownership
header, then thes3:PutBucketOwnershipControls
permission is required.To set an ACL on a bucket as part of a
CreateBucket
request, you must explicitly set S3 Object Ownership for the bucket to a different value than the default,BucketOwnerEnforced
. Additionally, if your desired bucket ACL grants public access, you must first create the bucket (without the bucket ACL) and then explicitly disable Block Public Access on the bucket before usingPutBucketAcl
to set the ACL. If you try to create a bucket with a public ACL, the request will fail.For the majority of modern use cases in S3, we recommend that you keep all Block Public Access settings enabled and keep ACLs disabled. If you would like to share data with users outside of your account, you can use bucket policies as needed. For more information, see Controlling ownership of objects and disabling ACLs for your bucket and Blocking public access to your Amazon S3 storage in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
S3 Block Public Access - If your specific use case requires granting public access to your S3 resources, you can disable Block Public Access. Specifically, you can create a new bucket with Block Public Access enabled, then separately call the
DeletePublicAccessBlock
API. To use this operation, you must have thes3:PutBucketPublicAccessBlock
permission. For more information about S3 Block Public Access, see Blocking public access to your Amazon S3 storage in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket permissions - You must have the
s3express:CreateBucket
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.The permissions for ACLs, Object Lock, S3 Object Ownership, and S3 Block Public Access are not supported for directory buckets. For directory buckets, all Block Public Access settings are enabled at the bucket level and S3 Object Ownership is set to Bucket owner enforced (ACLs disabled). These settings can't be modified.
For more information about permissions for creating and working with directory buckets, see Directory buckets in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about supported S3 features for directory buckets, see Features of S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to CreateBucket
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 2542 def create_bucket(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:create_bucket, params) req.send_request() end |
#create_multipart_upload(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateMultipartUploadOutput
This action initiates a multipart upload and returns an upload ID. This upload ID is used to associate all of the parts in the specific multipart upload. You specify this upload ID in each of your subsequent upload part requests (see UploadPart). You also include this upload ID in the final request to either complete or abort the multipart upload request. For more information about multipart uploads, see Multipart Upload Overview in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
If you have configured a lifecycle rule to abort incomplete multipart uploads, the created multipart upload must be completed within the number of days specified in the bucket lifecycle configuration. Otherwise, the incomplete multipart upload becomes eligible for an abort action and Amazon S3 aborts the multipart upload. For more information, see Aborting Incomplete Multipart Uploads Using a Bucket Lifecycle Configuration.
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make
requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These
endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Request signing
For request signing, multipart upload is just a series of regular requests. You initiate a multipart upload, send one or more requests to upload parts, and then complete the multipart upload process. You sign each request individually. There is nothing special about signing multipart upload requests. For more information about signing, see Authenticating Requests (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4) in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - To perform a multipart upload with encryption using an Key Management Service (KMS) KMS key, the requester must have permission to the
kms:Decrypt
andkms:GenerateDataKey
actions on the key. The requester must also have permissions for thekms:GenerateDataKey
action for theCreateMultipartUpload
API. Then, the requester needs permissions for thekms:Decrypt
action on theUploadPart
andUploadPartCopy
APIs. These permissions are required because Amazon S3 must decrypt and read data from the encrypted file parts before it completes the multipart upload. For more information, see Multipart upload API and permissions and Protecting data using server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.
- Encryption
General purpose buckets - Server-side encryption is for data encryption at rest. Amazon S3 encrypts your data as it writes it to disks in its data centers and decrypts it when you access it. Amazon S3 automatically encrypts all new objects that are uploaded to an S3 bucket. When doing a multipart upload, if you don't specify encryption information in your request, the encryption setting of the uploaded parts is set to the default encryption configuration of the destination bucket. By default, all buckets have a base level of encryption configuration that uses server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3). If the destination bucket has a default encryption configuration that uses server-side encryption with an Key Management Service (KMS) key (SSE-KMS), or a customer-provided encryption key (SSE-C), Amazon S3 uses the corresponding KMS key, or a customer-provided key to encrypt the uploaded parts. When you perform a CreateMultipartUpload operation, if you want to use a different type of encryption setting for the uploaded parts, you can request that Amazon S3 encrypts the object with a different encryption key (such as an Amazon S3 managed key, a KMS key, or a customer-provided key). When the encryption setting in your request is different from the default encryption configuration of the destination bucket, the encryption setting in your request takes precedence. If you choose to provide your own encryption key, the request headers you provide in UploadPart and UploadPartCopy requests must match the headers you used in the
CreateMultipartUpload
request.Use KMS keys (SSE-KMS) that include the Amazon Web Services managed key (
aws/s3
) and KMS customer managed keys stored in Key Management Service (KMS) – If you want Amazon Web Services to manage the keys used to encrypt data, specify the following headers in the request.x-amz-server-side-encryption
x-amz-server-side-encryption-aws-kms-key-id
x-amz-server-side-encryption-context
* If you specify x-amz-server-side-encryption:aws:kms
, but don't providex-amz-server-side-encryption-aws-kms-key-id
, Amazon S3 uses the Amazon Web Services managed key (aws/s3
key) in KMS to protect the data.To perform a multipart upload with encryption by using an Amazon Web Services KMS key, the requester must have permission to the
kms:Decrypt
andkms:GenerateDataKey*
actions on the key. These permissions are required because Amazon S3 must decrypt and read data from the encrypted file parts before it completes the multipart upload. For more information, see Multipart upload API and permissions and Protecting data using server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS in the Amazon S3 User Guide.If your Identity and Access Management (IAM) user or role is in the same Amazon Web Services account as the KMS key, then you must have these permissions on the key policy. If your IAM user or role is in a different account from the key, then you must have the permissions on both the key policy and your IAM user or role.
All
GET
andPUT
requests for an object protected by KMS fail if you don't make them by using Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), Transport Layer Security (TLS), or Signature Version 4. For information about configuring any of the officially supported Amazon Web Services SDKs and Amazon Web Services CLI, see Specifying the Signature Version in Request Authentication in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
For more information about server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS), see Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with KMS keys in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Use customer-provided encryption keys (SSE-C) – If you want to manage your own encryption keys, provide all the following headers in the request.
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-algorithm
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key-MD5
For more information about server-side encryption with customer-provided encryption keys (SSE-C), see Protecting data using server-side encryption with customer-provided encryption keys (SSE-C) in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory buckets - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) (
AES256
) and server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS) (aws:kms
). We recommend that the bucket's default encryption uses the desired encryption configuration and you don't override the bucket default encryption in yourCreateSession
requests orPUT
object requests. Then, new objects are automatically encrypted with the desired encryption settings. For more information, see Protecting data with server-side encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about the encryption overriding behaviors in directory buckets, see Specifying server-side encryption with KMS for new object uploads.In the Zonal endpoint API calls (except CopyObject and UploadPartCopy) using the REST API, the encryption request headers must match the encryption settings that are specified in the
CreateSession
request. You can't override the values of the encryption settings (x-amz-server-side-encryption
,x-amz-server-side-encryption-aws-kms-key-id
,x-amz-server-side-encryption-context
, andx-amz-server-side-encryption-bucket-key-enabled
) that are specified in theCreateSession
request. You don't need to explicitly specify these encryption settings values in Zonal endpoint API calls, and Amazon S3 will use the encryption settings values from theCreateSession
request to protect new objects in the directory bucket.When you use the CLI or the Amazon Web Services SDKs, for CreateSession
, the session token refreshes automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. The CLI or the Amazon Web Services SDKs use the bucket's default encryption configuration for theCreateSession
request. It's not supported to override the encryption settings values in theCreateSession
request. So in the Zonal endpoint API calls (except CopyObject and UploadPartCopy), the encryption request headers must match the default encryption configuration of the directory bucket.For directory buckets, when you perform a CreateMultipartUpload
operation and anUploadPartCopy
operation, the request headers you provide in theCreateMultipartUpload
request must match the default encryption configuration of the destination bucket.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to CreateMultipartUpload
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 3489 def create_multipart_upload(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:create_multipart_upload, params) req.send_request() end |
#create_session(params = {}) ⇒ Types::CreateSessionOutput
Creates a session that establishes temporary security credentials to support fast authentication and authorization for the Zonal endpoint API operations on directory buckets. For more information about Zonal endpoint API operations that include the Availability Zone in the request endpoint, see S3 Express One Zone APIs in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
To make Zonal endpoint API requests on a directory bucket, use the
CreateSession
API operation. Specifically, you grant
s3express:CreateSession
permission to a bucket in a bucket policy or
an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you use IAM credentials to make
the CreateSession
API request on the bucket, which returns temporary
security credentials that include the access key ID, secret access
key, session token, and expiration. These credentials have associated
permissions to access the Zonal endpoint API operations. After the
session is created, you don’t need to use other policies to grant
permissions to each Zonal endpoint API individually. Instead, in your
Zonal endpoint API requests, you sign your requests by applying the
temporary security credentials of the session to the request headers
and following the SigV4 protocol for authentication. You also apply
the session token to the x-amz-s3session-token
request header for
authorization. Temporary security credentials are scoped to the bucket
and expire after 5 minutes. After the expiration time, any calls that
you make with those credentials will fail. You must use IAM
credentials again to make a CreateSession
API request that generates
a new set of temporary credentials for use. Temporary credentials
cannot be extended or refreshed beyond the original specified
interval.
If you use Amazon Web Services SDKs, SDKs handle the session token refreshes automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. We recommend that you use the Amazon Web Services SDKs to initiate and manage requests to the CreateSession API. For more information, see Performance guidelines and design patterns in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
CopyObject
API operation - Unlike other Zonal endpoint API operations, theCopyObject
API operation doesn't use the temporary security credentials returned from theCreateSession
API operation for authentication and authorization. For information about authentication and authorization of theCopyObject
API operation on directory buckets, see CopyObject.HeadBucket
API operation - Unlike other Zonal endpoint API operations, theHeadBucket
API operation doesn't use the temporary security credentials returned from theCreateSession
API operation for authentication and authorization. For information about authentication and authorization of theHeadBucket
API operation on directory buckets, see HeadBucket.
- Permissions
To obtain temporary security credentials, you must create a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy that grants
s3express:CreateSession
permission to the bucket. In a policy, you can have thes3express:SessionMode
condition key to control who can create aReadWrite
orReadOnly
session. For more information aboutReadWrite
orReadOnly
sessions, seex-amz-create-session-mode
. For example policies, see Example bucket policies for S3 Express One Zone and Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) identity-based policies for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.To grant cross-account access to Zonal endpoint API operations, the bucket policy should also grant both accounts the
s3express:CreateSession
permission.If you want to encrypt objects with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
and thekms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the target KMS key.- Encryption
For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) (
AES256
) and server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS) (aws:kms
). We recommend that the bucket's default encryption uses the desired encryption configuration and you don't override the bucket default encryption in yourCreateSession
requests orPUT
object requests. Then, new objects are automatically encrypted with the desired encryption settings. For more information, see Protecting data with server-side encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about the encryption overriding behaviors in directory buckets, see Specifying server-side encryption with KMS for new object uploads.For Zonal endpoint (object-level) API operations except CopyObject and UploadPartCopy, you authenticate and authorize requests through CreateSession for low latency. To encrypt new objects in a directory bucket with SSE-KMS, you must specify SSE-KMS as the directory bucket's default encryption configuration with a KMS key (specifically, a customer managed key). Then, when a session is created for Zonal endpoint API operations, new objects are automatically encrypted and decrypted with SSE-KMS and S3 Bucket Keys during the session.
Only 1 customer managed key is supported per directory bucket for the lifetime of the bucket. The Amazon Web Services managed key ( aws/s3
) isn't supported. After you specify SSE-KMS as your bucket's default encryption configuration with a customer managed key, you can't change the customer managed key for the bucket's SSE-KMS configuration.In the Zonal endpoint API calls (except CopyObject and UploadPartCopy) using the REST API, you can't override the values of the encryption settings (
x-amz-server-side-encryption
,x-amz-server-side-encryption-aws-kms-key-id
,x-amz-server-side-encryption-context
, andx-amz-server-side-encryption-bucket-key-enabled
) from theCreateSession
request. You don't need to explicitly specify these encryption settings values in Zonal endpoint API calls, and Amazon S3 will use the encryption settings values from theCreateSession
request to protect new objects in the directory bucket.When you use the CLI or the Amazon Web Services SDKs, for CreateSession
, the session token refreshes automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. The CLI or the Amazon Web Services SDKs use the bucket's default encryption configuration for theCreateSession
request. It's not supported to override the encryption settings values in theCreateSession
request. Also, in the Zonal endpoint API calls (except CopyObject and UploadPartCopy), it's not supported to override the values of the encryption settings from theCreateSession
request.- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 3778 def create_session(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:create_session, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the S3 bucket. All objects (including all object versions and delete markers) in the bucket must be deleted before the bucket itself can be deleted.
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make
requests for this API operation to the Regional endpoint. These
endpoints support path-style requests in the format
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
. Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - You must have the
s3:DeleteBucket
permission on the specified bucket in a policy.Directory bucket permissions - You must have the
s3express:DeleteBucket
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to DeleteBucket
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 3883 def delete_bucket(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes an analytics configuration for the bucket (specified by the analytics configuration ID).
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutAnalyticsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about the Amazon S3 analytics feature, see Amazon S3 Analytics – Storage Class Analysis.
The following operations are related to
DeleteBucketAnalyticsConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 3949 def delete_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_analytics_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_cors(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the cors
configuration information set for the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:PutBucketCORS
action. The bucket owner has this permission by
default and can grant this permission to others.
For information about cors
, see Enabling Cross-Origin Resource
Sharing in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Related Resources
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4009 def delete_bucket_cors(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_cors, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_encryption(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This implementation of the DELETE action resets the default encryption for the bucket as server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3).
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: SSE-S3 and SSE-KMS. For information about the default encryption configuration in directory buckets, see Setting default server-side encryption behavior for directory buckets.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - The
s3:PutEncryptionConfiguration
permission is required in a policy. The bucket owner has this permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation, you must have the
s3express:PutEncryptionConfiguration
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to DeleteBucketEncryption
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4113 def delete_bucket_encryption(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_encryption, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the S3 Intelligent-Tiering configuration from the specified bucket.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is designed to optimize storage costs by automatically moving data to the most cost-effective storage access tier, without performance impact or operational overhead. S3 Intelligent-Tiering delivers automatic cost savings in three low latency and high throughput access tiers. To get the lowest storage cost on data that can be accessed in minutes to hours, you can choose to activate additional archiving capabilities.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is the ideal storage class for data with unknown, changing, or unpredictable access patterns, independent of object size or retention period. If the size of an object is less than 128 KB, it is not monitored and not eligible for auto-tiering. Smaller objects can be stored, but they are always charged at the Frequent Access tier rates in the S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class.
For more information, see Storage class for automatically optimizing frequently and infrequently accessed objects.
Operations related to DeleteBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration
include:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4180 def delete_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes an inventory configuration (identified by the inventory ID) from the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutInventoryConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about the Amazon S3 inventory feature, see Amazon S3 Inventory.
Operations related to DeleteBucketInventoryConfiguration
include:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4245 def delete_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_inventory_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the lifecycle configuration from the specified bucket. Amazon S3 removes all the lifecycle configuration rules in the lifecycle subresource associated with the bucket. Your objects never expire, and Amazon S3 no longer automatically deletes any objects on the basis of rules contained in the deleted lifecycle configuration.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:PutLifecycleConfiguration
action. By default, the bucket owner
has this permission and the bucket owner can grant this permission to
others.
There is usually some time lag before lifecycle configuration deletion is fully propagated to all the Amazon S3 systems.
For more information about the object expiration, see Elements to Describe Lifecycle Actions.
Related actions include:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4313 def delete_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_lifecycle, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes a metrics configuration for the Amazon CloudWatch request metrics (specified by the metrics configuration ID) from the bucket. Note that this doesn't include the daily storage metrics.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutMetricsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about CloudWatch request metrics for Amazon S3, see Monitoring Metrics with Amazon CloudWatch.
The following operations are related to
DeleteBucketMetricsConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4383 def delete_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_metrics_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Removes OwnershipControls
for an Amazon S3 bucket. To use this
operation, you must have the s3:PutBucketOwnershipControls
permission. For more information about Amazon S3 permissions, see
Specifying Permissions in a Policy.
For information about Amazon S3 Object Ownership, see Using Object Ownership.
The following operations are related to
DeleteBucketOwnershipControls
:
GetBucketOwnershipControls
PutBucketOwnershipControls
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4433 def delete_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_ownership_controls, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_policy(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the policy of a specified bucket.
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
.
Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information,
see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
If you are using an identity other than the root user of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the bucket, the calling identity must both have the
DeleteBucketPolicy
permissions on the specified bucket and belong to the bucket owner's account in order to use this operation.If you don't have
DeleteBucketPolicy
permissions, Amazon S3 returns a403 Access Denied
error. If you have the correct permissions, but you're not using an identity that belongs to the bucket owner's account, Amazon S3 returns a405 Method Not Allowed
error.To ensure that bucket owners don't inadvertently lock themselves out of their own buckets, the root principal in a bucket owner's Amazon Web Services account can perform the
GetBucketPolicy
,PutBucketPolicy
, andDeleteBucketPolicy
API actions, even if their bucket policy explicitly denies the root principal's access. Bucket owner root principals can only be blocked from performing these API actions by VPC endpoint policies and Amazon Web Services Organizations policies.General purpose bucket permissions - The
s3:DeleteBucketPolicy
permission is required in a policy. For more information about general purpose buckets bucket policies, see Using Bucket Policies and User Policies in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation, you must have the
s3express:DeleteBucketPolicy
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to DeleteBucketPolicy
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4557 def delete_bucket_policy(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_policy, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_replication(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the replication configuration from the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutReplicationConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has these
permissions by default and can grant it to others. For more
information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket
Subresource Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your
Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about replication configuration, see Replication in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following operations are related to DeleteBucketReplication
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4627 def delete_bucket_replication(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_replication, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Deletes the tags from the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:PutBucketTagging
action. By default, the bucket owner has this
permission and can grant this permission to others.
The following operations are related to DeleteBucketTagging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4683 def delete_bucket_tagging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_tagging, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_bucket_website(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This action removes the website configuration for a bucket. Amazon S3
returns a 200 OK
response upon successfully deleting a website
configuration on the specified bucket. You will get a 200 OK
response if the website configuration you are trying to delete does
not exist on the bucket. Amazon S3 returns a 404
response if the
bucket specified in the request does not exist.
This DELETE action requires the S3:DeleteBucketWebsite
permission.
By default, only the bucket owner can delete the website configuration
attached to a bucket. However, bucket owners can grant other users
permission to delete the website configuration by writing a bucket
policy granting them the S3:DeleteBucketWebsite
permission.
For more information about hosting websites, see Hosting Websites on Amazon S3.
The following operations are related to DeleteBucketWebsite
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4751 def delete_bucket_website(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_bucket_website, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DeleteObjectOutput
Removes an object from a bucket. The behavior depends on the bucket's versioning state. For more information, see Best practices to consider before deleting an object.
To remove a specific version, you must use the versionId
query
parameter. Using this query parameter permanently deletes the version.
If the object deleted is a delete marker, Amazon S3 sets the response
header x-amz-delete-marker
to true. If the object you want to delete
is in a bucket where the bucket versioning configuration is MFA delete
enabled, you must include the x-amz-mfa
request header in the DELETE
versionId
request. Requests that include x-amz-mfa
must use HTTPS.
For more information about MFA delete and to see example requests, see
Using MFA delete and Sample request in the Amazon S3 User
Guide.
null
value of the version ID is
supported by directory buckets. You can only specify null
to the
versionId
query parameter in the request.
For directory buckets, you must make requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.MFA delete is not supported by directory buckets.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - The following permissions are required in your policies when your
DeleteObjects
request includes specific headers.s3:DeleteObject
- To delete an object from a bucket, you must always have thes3:DeleteObject
permission.You can also use PutBucketLifecycle to delete objects in Amazon S3. s3:DeleteObjectVersion
- To delete a specific version of an object from a versioning-enabled bucket, you must have thes3:DeleteObjectVersion
permission.If you want to block users or accounts from removing or deleting objects from your bucket, you must deny them the
s3:DeleteObject
,s3:DeleteObjectVersion
, ands3:PutLifeCycleConfiguration
permissions.
Directory buckets permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the CreateSession API operation for session-based authorization.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following action is related to DeleteObject
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 4979 def delete_object(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_object, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_object_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DeleteObjectTaggingOutput
Removes the entire tag set from the specified object. For more information about managing object tags, see Object Tagging.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:DeleteObjectTagging
action.
To delete tags of a specific object version, add the versionId
query
parameter in the request. You will need permission for the
s3:DeleteObjectVersionTagging
action.
The following operations are related to DeleteObjectTagging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5103 def delete_object_tagging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_object_tagging, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_objects(params = {}) ⇒ Types::DeleteObjectsOutput
This operation enables you to delete multiple objects from a bucket using a single HTTP request. If you know the object keys that you want to delete, then this operation provides a suitable alternative to sending individual delete requests, reducing per-request overhead.
The request can contain a list of up to 1000 keys that you want to delete. In the XML, you provide the object key names, and optionally, version IDs if you want to delete a specific version of the object from a versioning-enabled bucket. For each key, Amazon S3 performs a delete operation and returns the result of that delete, success or failure, in the response. Note that if the object specified in the request is not found, Amazon S3 returns the result as deleted.
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make
requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These
endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The operation supports two modes for the response: verbose and quiet. By default, the operation uses verbose mode in which the response includes the result of deletion of each key in your request. In quiet mode the response includes only keys where the delete operation encountered an error. For a successful deletion in a quiet mode, the operation does not return any information about the delete in the response body.
When performing this action on an MFA Delete enabled bucket, that attempts to delete any versioned objects, you must include an MFA token. If you do not provide one, the entire request will fail, even if there are non-versioned objects you are trying to delete. If you provide an invalid token, whether there are versioned keys in the request or not, the entire Multi-Object Delete request will fail. For information about MFA Delete, see MFA Delete in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - The following permissions are required in your policies when your
DeleteObjects
request includes specific headers.s3:DeleteObject
- To delete an object from a bucket, you must always specify thes3:DeleteObject
permission.s3:DeleteObjectVersion
- To delete a specific version of an object from a versioning-enabled bucket, you must specify thes3:DeleteObjectVersion
permission.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.
- Content-MD5 request header
General purpose bucket - The Content-MD5 request header is required for all Multi-Object Delete requests. Amazon S3 uses the header value to ensure that your request body has not been altered in transit.
Directory bucket - The Content-MD5 request header or a additional checksum request header (including
x-amz-checksum-crc32
,x-amz-checksum-crc32c
,x-amz-checksum-sha1
, orx-amz-checksum-sha256
) is required for all Multi-Object Delete requests.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to DeleteObjects
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5476 def delete_objects(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_objects, params) req.send_request() end |
#delete_public_access_block(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Removes the PublicAccessBlock
configuration for an Amazon S3 bucket.
To use this operation, you must have the
s3:PutBucketPublicAccessBlock
permission. For more information about
permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Subresource
Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3
Resources.
The following operations are related to DeletePublicAccessBlock
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5533 def delete_public_access_block(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:delete_public_access_block, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_accelerate_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketAccelerateConfigurationOutput
This implementation of the GET action uses the accelerate
subresource to return the Transfer Acceleration state of a bucket,
which is either Enabled
or Suspended
. Amazon S3 Transfer
Acceleration is a bucket-level feature that enables you to perform
faster data transfers to and from Amazon S3.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:GetAccelerateConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to your Amazon S3 Resources in the Amazon S3 User
Guide.
You set the Transfer Acceleration state of an existing bucket to
Enabled
or Suspended
by using the
PutBucketAccelerateConfiguration operation.
A GET accelerate
request does not return a state value for a bucket
that has no transfer acceleration state. A bucket has no Transfer
Acceleration state if a state has never been set on the bucket.
For more information about transfer acceleration, see Transfer Acceleration in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following operations are related to
GetBucketAccelerateConfiguration
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5629 def get_bucket_accelerate_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_accelerate_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketAclOutput
This implementation of the GET
action uses the acl
subresource to
return the access control list (ACL) of a bucket. To use GET
to
return the ACL of the bucket, you must have the READ_ACP
access to
the bucket. If READ_ACP
permission is granted to the anonymous user,
you can return the ACL of the bucket without using an authorization
header.
When you use this API operation with an access point, provide the alias of the access point in place of the bucket name.
When you use this API operation with an Object Lambda access point,
provide the alias of the Object Lambda access point in place of the
bucket name. If the Object Lambda access point alias in a request is
not valid, the error code InvalidAccessPointAliasError
is returned.
For more information about InvalidAccessPointAliasError
, see List
of Error Codes.
bucket-owner-full-control
ACL with the owner being the account that
created the bucket. For more information, see Controlling object
ownership and disabling ACLs in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following operations are related to GetBucketAcl
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5725 def get_bucket_acl(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_acl, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketAnalyticsConfigurationOutput
This implementation of the GET action returns an analytics configuration (identified by the analytics configuration ID) from the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:GetAnalyticsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources in the Amazon S3 User
Guide.
For information about Amazon S3 analytics feature, see Amazon S3 Analytics – Storage Class Analysis in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following operations are related to
GetBucketAnalyticsConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5811 def get_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_analytics_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_cors(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketCorsOutput
Returns the Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) configuration information set for the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:GetBucketCORS
action. By default, the bucket owner has this
permission and can grant it to others.
When you use this API operation with an access point, provide the alias of the access point in place of the bucket name.
When you use this API operation with an Object Lambda access point,
provide the alias of the Object Lambda access point in place of the
bucket name. If the Object Lambda access point alias in a request is
not valid, the error code InvalidAccessPointAliasError
is returned.
For more information about InvalidAccessPointAliasError
, see List
of Error Codes.
For more information about CORS, see Enabling Cross-Origin Resource Sharing.
The following operations are related to GetBucketCors
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 5931 def get_bucket_cors(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_cors, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_encryption(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketEncryptionOutput
Returns the default encryption configuration for an Amazon S3 bucket. By default, all buckets have a default encryption configuration that uses server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3).
- Directory buckets - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: SSE-S3 and SSE-KMS. For information about the default encryption configuration in directory buckets, see Setting default server-side encryption behavior for directory buckets.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - The
s3:GetEncryptionConfiguration
permission is required in a policy. The bucket owner has this permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation, you must have the
s3express:GetEncryptionConfiguration
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to GetBucketEncryption
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6044 def get_bucket_encryption(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_encryption, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurationOutput
Gets the S3 Intelligent-Tiering configuration from the specified bucket.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is designed to optimize storage costs by automatically moving data to the most cost-effective storage access tier, without performance impact or operational overhead. S3 Intelligent-Tiering delivers automatic cost savings in three low latency and high throughput access tiers. To get the lowest storage cost on data that can be accessed in minutes to hours, you can choose to activate additional archiving capabilities.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is the ideal storage class for data with unknown, changing, or unpredictable access patterns, independent of object size or retention period. If the size of an object is less than 128 KB, it is not monitored and not eligible for auto-tiering. Smaller objects can be stored, but they are always charged at the Frequent Access tier rates in the S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class.
For more information, see Storage class for automatically optimizing frequently and infrequently accessed objects.
Operations related to GetBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration
include:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6128 def get_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketInventoryConfigurationOutput
Returns an inventory configuration (identified by the inventory configuration ID) from the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:GetInventoryConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default and can grant this permission to others. For
more information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket
Subresource Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your
Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about the Amazon S3 inventory feature, see Amazon S3 Inventory.
The following operations are related to
GetBucketInventoryConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6211 def get_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_inventory_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLifecycleOutput
For an updated version of this API, see
GetBucketLifecycleConfiguration. If you configured a bucket
lifecycle using the filter
element, you should see the updated
version of this topic. This topic is provided for backward
compatibility.
Returns the lifecycle configuration information set on the bucket. For information about lifecycle configuration, see Object Lifecycle Management.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:GetLifecycleConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
GetBucketLifecycle
has the following special error:
Error code:
NoSuchLifecycleConfiguration
Description: The lifecycle configuration does not exist.
HTTP Status Code: 404 Not Found
SOAP Fault Code Prefix: Client
The following operations are related to GetBucketLifecycle
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6329 def get_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_lifecycle, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_lifecycle_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLifecycleConfigurationOutput
Returns the lifecycle configuration information set on the bucket. For information about lifecycle configuration, see Object Lifecycle Management.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:GetLifecycleConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission, by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
GetBucketLifecycleConfiguration
has the following special error:
Error code:
NoSuchLifecycleConfiguration
Description: The lifecycle configuration does not exist.
HTTP Status Code: 404 Not Found
SOAP Fault Code Prefix: Client
The following operations are related to
GetBucketLifecycleConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6474 def get_bucket_lifecycle_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_lifecycle_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_location(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLocationOutput
Returns the Region the bucket resides in. You set the bucket's Region
using the LocationConstraint
request parameter in a CreateBucket
request. For more information, see CreateBucket.
When you use this API operation with an access point, provide the alias of the access point in place of the bucket name.
When you use this API operation with an Object Lambda access point,
provide the alias of the Object Lambda access point in place of the
bucket name. If the Object Lambda access point alias in a request is
not valid, the error code InvalidAccessPointAliasError
is returned.
For more information about InvalidAccessPointAliasError
, see List
of Error Codes.
The following operations are related to GetBucketLocation
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6571 def get_bucket_location(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_location, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_logging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketLoggingOutput
Returns the logging status of a bucket and the permissions users have to view and modify that status.
The following operations are related to GetBucketLogging
:
6630 6631 6632 6633 |
# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6630 def get_bucket_logging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_logging, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketMetricsConfigurationOutput
Gets a metrics configuration (specified by the metrics configuration ID) from the bucket. Note that this doesn't include the daily storage metrics.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:GetMetricsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about CloudWatch request metrics for Amazon S3, see Monitoring Metrics with Amazon CloudWatch.
The following operations are related to
GetBucketMetricsConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6716 def get_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_metrics_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_notification(params = {}) ⇒ Types::NotificationConfigurationDeprecated
No longer used, see GetBucketNotificationConfiguration.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6847 def get_bucket_notification(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_notification, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_notification_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::NotificationConfiguration
Returns the notification configuration of a bucket.
If notifications are not enabled on the bucket, the action returns an
empty NotificationConfiguration
element.
By default, you must be the bucket owner to read the notification
configuration of a bucket. However, the bucket owner can use a bucket
policy to grant permission to other users to read this configuration
with the s3:GetBucketNotification
permission.
When you use this API operation with an access point, provide the alias of the access point in place of the bucket name.
When you use this API operation with an Object Lambda access point,
provide the alias of the Object Lambda access point in place of the
bucket name. If the Object Lambda access point alias in a request is
not valid, the error code InvalidAccessPointAliasError
is returned.
For more information about InvalidAccessPointAliasError
, see List
of Error Codes.
For more information about setting and reading the notification configuration on a bucket, see Setting Up Notification of Bucket Events. For more information about bucket policies, see Using Bucket Policies.
The following action is related to GetBucketNotification
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 6962 def get_bucket_notification_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_notification_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketOwnershipControlsOutput
Retrieves OwnershipControls
for an Amazon S3 bucket. To use this
operation, you must have the s3:GetBucketOwnershipControls
permission. For more information about Amazon S3 permissions, see
Specifying permissions in a policy.
For information about Amazon S3 Object Ownership, see Using Object Ownership.
The following operations are related to GetBucketOwnershipControls
:
PutBucketOwnershipControls
DeleteBucketOwnershipControls
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7019 def get_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_ownership_controls, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_policy(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketPolicyOutput
Returns the policy of a specified bucket.
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
.
Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information,
see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
If you are using an identity other than the root user of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the bucket, the calling identity must both have the
GetBucketPolicy
permissions on the specified bucket and belong to the bucket owner's account in order to use this operation.If you don't have
GetBucketPolicy
permissions, Amazon S3 returns a403 Access Denied
error. If you have the correct permissions, but you're not using an identity that belongs to the bucket owner's account, Amazon S3 returns a405 Method Not Allowed
error.To ensure that bucket owners don't inadvertently lock themselves out of their own buckets, the root principal in a bucket owner's Amazon Web Services account can perform the
GetBucketPolicy
,PutBucketPolicy
, andDeleteBucketPolicy
API actions, even if their bucket policy explicitly denies the root principal's access. Bucket owner root principals can only be blocked from performing these API actions by VPC endpoint policies and Amazon Web Services Organizations policies.General purpose bucket permissions - The
s3:GetBucketPolicy
permission is required in a policy. For more information about general purpose buckets bucket policies, see Using Bucket Policies and User Policies in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation, you must have the
s3express:GetBucketPolicy
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Example bucket policies
General purpose buckets example bucket policies - See Bucket policy examples in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket example bucket policies - See Example bucket policies for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following action is related to GetBucketPolicy
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7179 def get_bucket_policy(params = {}, = {}, &block) req = build_request(:get_bucket_policy, params) req.send_request(, &block) end |
#get_bucket_policy_status(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketPolicyStatusOutput
Retrieves the policy status for an Amazon S3 bucket, indicating
whether the bucket is public. In order to use this operation, you must
have the s3:GetBucketPolicyStatus
permission. For more information
about Amazon S3 permissions, see Specifying Permissions in a
Policy.
For more information about when Amazon S3 considers a bucket public, see The Meaning of "Public".
The following operations are related to GetBucketPolicyStatus
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7244 def get_bucket_policy_status(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_policy_status, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_replication(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketReplicationOutput
Returns the replication configuration of a bucket.
For information about replication configuration, see Replication in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
This action requires permissions for the
s3:GetReplicationConfiguration
action. For more information about
permissions, see Using Bucket Policies and User Policies.
If you include the Filter
element in a replication configuration,
you must also include the DeleteMarkerReplication
and Priority
elements. The response also returns those elements.
For information about GetBucketReplication
errors, see List of
replication-related error codes
The following operations are related to GetBucketReplication
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7367 def get_bucket_replication(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_replication, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_request_payment(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketRequestPaymentOutput
Returns the request payment configuration of a bucket. To use this version of the operation, you must be the bucket owner. For more information, see Requester Pays Buckets.
The following operations are related to GetBucketRequestPayment
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7433 def get_bucket_request_payment(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_request_payment, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketTaggingOutput
Returns the tag set associated with the bucket.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:GetBucketTagging
action. By default, the bucket owner has this
permission and can grant this permission to others.
GetBucketTagging
has the following special error:
Error code:
NoSuchTagSet
- Description: There is no tag set associated with the bucket.
^
The following operations are related to GetBucketTagging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7519 def get_bucket_tagging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_tagging, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_versioning(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketVersioningOutput
Returns the versioning state of a bucket.
To retrieve the versioning state of a bucket, you must be the bucket owner.
This implementation also returns the MFA Delete status of the
versioning state. If the MFA Delete status is enabled
, the bucket
owner must use an authentication device to change the versioning state
of the bucket.
The following operations are related to GetBucketVersioning
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7596 def get_bucket_versioning(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_versioning, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_bucket_website(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetBucketWebsiteOutput
Returns the website configuration for a bucket. To host website on Amazon S3, you can configure a bucket as website by adding a website configuration. For more information about hosting websites, see Hosting Websites on Amazon S3.
This GET action requires the S3:GetBucketWebsite
permission. By
default, only the bucket owner can read the bucket website
configuration. However, bucket owners can allow other users to read
the website configuration by writing a bucket policy granting them the
S3:GetBucketWebsite
permission.
The following operations are related to GetBucketWebsite
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 7688 def get_bucket_website(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_bucket_website, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectOutput
Retrieves an object from Amazon S3.
In the GetObject
request, specify the full key name for the object.
General purpose buckets - Both the virtual-hosted-style requests
and the path-style requests are supported. For a virtual hosted-style
request example, if you have the object
photos/2006/February/sample.jpg
, specify the object key name as
/photos/2006/February/sample.jpg
. For a path-style request example,
if you have the object photos/2006/February/sample.jpg
in the bucket
named examplebucket
, specify the object key name as
/examplebucket/photos/2006/February/sample.jpg
. For more information
about request types, see HTTP Host Header Bucket Specification in
the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory buckets - Only virtual-hosted-style requests are
supported. For a virtual hosted-style request example, if you have the
object photos/2006/February/sample.jpg
in the bucket named
examplebucket--use1-az5--x-s3
, specify the object key name as
/photos/2006/February/sample.jpg
. Also, when you make requests to
this API operation, your requests are sent to the Zonal endpoint.
These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - You must have the required permissions in a policy. To use
GetObject
, you must have theREAD
access to the object (or version). If you grantREAD
access to the anonymous user, theGetObject
operation returns the object without using an authorization header. For more information, see Specifying permissions in a policy in the Amazon S3 User Guide.If you include a
versionId
in your request header, you must have thes3:GetObjectVersion
permission to access a specific version of an object. Thes3:GetObject
permission is not required in this scenario.If you request the current version of an object without a specific
versionId
in the request header, only thes3:GetObject
permission is required. Thes3:GetObjectVersion
permission is not required in this scenario.If the object that you request doesn’t exist, the error that Amazon S3 returns depends on whether you also have the
s3:ListBucket
permission.If you have the
s3:ListBucket
permission on the bucket, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status code404 Not Found
error.If you don’t have the
s3:ListBucket
permission, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status code403 Access Denied
error.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.If the object is encrypted using SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.
- Storage classes
If the object you are retrieving is stored in the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval storage class, the S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage class, the S3 Intelligent-Tiering Archive Access tier, or the S3 Intelligent-Tiering Deep Archive Access tier, before you can retrieve the object you must first restore a copy using RestoreObject. Otherwise, this operation returns an
InvalidObjectState
error. For information about restoring archived objects, see Restoring Archived Objects in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory buckets - For directory buckets, only the S3 Express One Zone storage class is supported to store newly created objects. Unsupported storage class values won't write a destination object and will respond with the HTTP status code
400 Bad Request
.- Encryption
Encryption request headers, like
x-amz-server-side-encryption
, should not be sent for theGetObject
requests, if your object uses server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed encryption keys (SSE-S3), server-side encryption with Key Management Service (KMS) keys (SSE-KMS), or dual-layer server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS keys (DSSE-KMS). If you include the header in yourGetObject
requests for the object that uses these types of keys, you’ll get an HTTP400 Bad Request
error.Directory buckets - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: SSE-S3 and SSE-KMS. SSE-C isn't supported. For more information, see Protecting data with server-side encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Overriding response header values through the request
There are times when you want to override certain response header values of a
GetObject
response. For example, you might override theContent-Disposition
response header value through yourGetObject
request.You can override values for a set of response headers. These modified response header values are included only in a successful response, that is, when the HTTP status code
200 OK
is returned. The headers you can override using the following query parameters in the request are a subset of the headers that Amazon S3 accepts when you create an object.The response headers that you can override for the
GetObject
response areCache-Control
,Content-Disposition
,Content-Encoding
,Content-Language
,Content-Type
, andExpires
.To override values for a set of response headers in the
GetObject
response, you can use the following query parameters in the request.response-cache-control
response-content-disposition
response-content-encoding
response-content-language
response-content-type
response-expires
When you use these parameters, you must sign the request by using either an Authorization header or a presigned URL. These parameters cannot be used with an unsigned (anonymous) request. - HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to GetObject
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 8354 def get_object(params = {}, = {}, &block) req = build_request(:get_object, params) req.send_request(, &block) end |
#get_object_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectAclOutput
Returns the access control list (ACL) of an object. To use this
operation, you must have s3:GetObjectAcl
permissions or READ_ACP
access to the object. For more information, see Mapping of ACL
permissions and access policy permissions in the Amazon S3 User
Guide
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
By default, GET returns ACL information about the current version of an object. To return ACL information about a different version, use the versionId subresource.
bucket-owner-full-control
ACL with the owner being the account that
created the bucket. For more information, see Controlling object
ownership and disabling ACLs in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following operations are related to GetObjectAcl
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 8538 def get_object_acl(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_object_acl, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object_attributes(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectAttributesOutput
Retrieves all the metadata from an object without returning the object itself. This operation is useful if you're interested only in an object's metadata.
GetObjectAttributes
combines the functionality of HeadObject
and
ListParts
. All of the data returned with each of those individual
calls can be returned with a single call to GetObjectAttributes
.
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - To use
GetObjectAttributes
, you must have READ access to the object. The permissions that you need to use this operation depend on whether the bucket is versioned. If the bucket is versioned, you need both thes3:GetObjectVersion
ands3:GetObjectVersionAttributes
permissions for this operation. If the bucket is not versioned, you need thes3:GetObject
ands3:GetObjectAttributes
permissions. For more information, see Specifying Permissions in a Policy in the Amazon S3 User Guide. If the object that you request does not exist, the error Amazon S3 returns depends on whether you also have thes3:ListBucket
permission.If you have the
s3:ListBucket
permission on the bucket, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status code404 Not Found
("no such key") error.If you don't have the
s3:ListBucket
permission, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status code403 Forbidden
("access denied") error.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.If the object is encrypted with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.
- Encryption
Encryption request headers, like x-amz-server-side-encryption
, should not be sent forHEAD
requests if your object uses server-side encryption with Key Management Service (KMS) keys (SSE-KMS), dual-layer server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS keys (DSSE-KMS), or server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed encryption keys (SSE-S3). Thex-amz-server-side-encryption
header is used when youPUT
an object to S3 and want to specify the encryption method. If you include this header in aGET
request for an object that uses these types of keys, you’ll get an HTTP400 Bad Request
error. It's because the encryption method can't be changed when you retrieve the object.If you encrypt an object by using server-side encryption with customer-provided encryption keys (SSE-C) when you store the object in Amazon S3, then when you retrieve the metadata from the object, you must use the following headers to provide the encryption key for the server to be able to retrieve the object's metadata. The headers are:
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-algorithm
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key-MD5
For more information about SSE-C, see Server-Side Encryption (Using Customer-Provided Encryption Keys) in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket permissions - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) ( AES256
) and server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS) (aws:kms
). We recommend that the bucket's default encryption uses the desired encryption configuration and you don't override the bucket default encryption in yourCreateSession
requests orPUT
object requests. Then, new objects are automatically encrypted with the desired encryption settings. For more information, see Protecting data with server-side encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about the encryption overriding behaviors in directory buckets, see Specifying server-side encryption with KMS for new object uploads.- Versioning
Directory buckets - S3 Versioning isn't enabled and supported for directory buckets. For this API operation, only the
null
value of the version ID is supported by directory buckets. You can only specifynull
to theversionId
query parameter in the request.- Conditional request headers
Consider the following when using request headers:
If both of the
If-Match
andIf-Unmodified-Since
headers are present in the request as follows, then Amazon S3 returns the HTTP status code200 OK
and the data requested:If-Match
condition evaluates totrue
.If-Unmodified-Since
condition evaluates tofalse
.
For more information about conditional requests, see RFC 7232.
If both of the
If-None-Match
andIf-Modified-Since
headers are present in the request as follows, then Amazon S3 returns the HTTP status code304 Not Modified
:If-None-Match
condition evaluates tofalse
.If-Modified-Since
condition evaluates totrue
.
For more information about conditional requests, see RFC 7232.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following actions are related to GetObjectAttributes
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 8900 def get_object_attributes(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_object_attributes, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object_legal_hold(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectLegalHoldOutput
Gets an object's current legal hold status. For more information, see Locking Objects.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
The following action is related to GetObjectLegalHold
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 8996 def get_object_legal_hold(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_object_legal_hold, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object_lock_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectLockConfigurationOutput
Gets the Object Lock configuration for a bucket. The rule specified in the Object Lock configuration will be applied by default to every new object placed in the specified bucket. For more information, see Locking Objects.
The following action is related to GetObjectLockConfiguration
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 9066 def get_object_lock_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_object_lock_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object_retention(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectRetentionOutput
Retrieves an object's retention settings. For more information, see Locking Objects.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
The following action is related to GetObjectRetention
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 9163 def get_object_retention(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_object_retention, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectTaggingOutput
Returns the tag-set of an object. You send the GET request against the tagging subresource associated with the object.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:GetObjectTagging
action. By default, the GET action returns
information about current version of an object. For a versioned
bucket, you can have multiple versions of an object in your bucket. To
retrieve tags of any other version, use the versionId query parameter.
You also need permission for the s3:GetObjectVersionTagging
action.
By default, the bucket owner has this permission and can grant this permission to others.
For information about the Amazon S3 object tagging feature, see Object Tagging.
The following actions are related to GetObjectTagging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 9332 def get_object_tagging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_object_tagging, params) req.send_request() end |
#get_object_torrent(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetObjectTorrentOutput
Returns torrent files from a bucket. BitTorrent can save you bandwidth when you're distributing large files.
To use GET, you must have READ access to the object.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
The following action is related to GetObjectTorrent
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 9433 def get_object_torrent(params = {}, = {}, &block) req = build_request(:get_object_torrent, params) req.send_request(, &block) end |
#get_public_access_block(params = {}) ⇒ Types::GetPublicAccessBlockOutput
Retrieves the PublicAccessBlock
configuration for an Amazon S3
bucket. To use this operation, you must have the
s3:GetBucketPublicAccessBlock
permission. For more information about
Amazon S3 permissions, see Specifying Permissions in a Policy.
When Amazon S3 evaluates the PublicAccessBlock
configuration for a
bucket or an object, it checks the PublicAccessBlock
configuration
for both the bucket (or the bucket that contains the object) and the
bucket owner's account. If the PublicAccessBlock
settings are
different between the bucket and the account, Amazon S3 uses the most
restrictive combination of the bucket-level and account-level
settings.
For more information about when Amazon S3 considers a bucket or an object public, see The Meaning of "Public".
The following operations are related to GetPublicAccessBlock
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 9508 def get_public_access_block(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:get_public_access_block, params) req.send_request() end |
#head_bucket(params = {}) ⇒ Types::HeadBucketOutput
You can use this operation to determine if a bucket exists and if you
have permission to access it. The action returns a 200 OK
if the
bucket exists and you have permission to access it.
HEAD
request returns a generic 400 Bad Request
, 403
Forbidden
or 404 Not Found
code. A message body is not included, so
you cannot determine the exception beyond these HTTP response codes.
- Authentication and authorization
General purpose buckets - Request to public buckets that grant the s3:ListBucket permission publicly do not need to be signed. All other
HeadBucket
requests must be authenticated and signed by using IAM credentials (access key ID and secret access key for the IAM identities). All headers with thex-amz-
prefix, includingx-amz-copy-source
, must be signed. For more information, see REST Authentication.Directory buckets - You must use IAM credentials to authenticate and authorize your access to the
HeadBucket
API operation, instead of using the temporary security credentials through theCreateSession
API operation.Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs handles authentication and authorization on your behalf.
Permissions
:
General purpose bucket permissions - To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:ListBucket
action. The bucket owner has this permission by default and can grant this permission to others. For more information about permissions, see Managing access permissions to your Amazon S3 resources in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - You must have the
s3express:CreateSession
permission in theAction
element of a policy. By default, the session is in theReadWrite
mode. If you want to restrict the access, you can explicitly set thes3express:SessionMode
condition key toReadOnly
on the bucket.For more information about example bucket policies, see Example bucket policies for S3 Express One Zone and Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) identity-based policies for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.You must make requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following waiters are defined for this operation (see #wait_until for detailed usage):
- bucket_exists
- bucket_not_exists
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 9684 def head_bucket(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:head_bucket, params) req.send_request() end |
#head_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::HeadObjectOutput
The HEAD
operation retrieves metadata from an object without
returning the object itself. This operation is useful if you're
interested only in an object's metadata.
HEAD
request has the same options as a GET
operation on an
object. The response is identical to the GET
response except that
there is no response body. Because of this, if the HEAD
request
generates an error, it returns a generic code, such as 400 Bad
Request
, 403 Forbidden
, 404 Not Found
, 405 Method Not Allowed
,
412 Precondition Failed
, or 304 Not Modified
. It's not possible
to retrieve the exact exception of these error codes.
Request headers are limited to 8 KB in size. For more information, see Common Request Headers.
Permissions
:
General purpose bucket permissions - To use
HEAD
, you must have thes3:GetObject
permission. You need the relevant read object (or version) permission for this operation. For more information, see Actions, resources, and condition keys for Amazon S3 in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about the permissions to S3 API operations by S3 resource types, see Required permissions for Amazon S3 API operations in the Amazon S3 User Guide.If the object you request doesn't exist, the error that Amazon S3 returns depends on whether you also have the
s3:ListBucket
permission.If you have the
s3:ListBucket
permission on the bucket, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status code404 Not Found
error.If you don’t have the
s3:ListBucket
permission, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status code403 Forbidden
error.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.If you enable
x-amz-checksum-mode
in the request and the object is encrypted with Amazon Web Services Key Management Service (Amazon Web Services KMS), you must also have thekms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key to retrieve the checksum of the object.
- Encryption
Encryption request headers, like x-amz-server-side-encryption
, should not be sent forHEAD
requests if your object uses server-side encryption with Key Management Service (KMS) keys (SSE-KMS), dual-layer server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS keys (DSSE-KMS), or server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed encryption keys (SSE-S3). Thex-amz-server-side-encryption
header is used when youPUT
an object to S3 and want to specify the encryption method. If you include this header in aHEAD
request for an object that uses these types of keys, you’ll get an HTTP400 Bad Request
error. It's because the encryption method can't be changed when you retrieve the object.If you encrypt an object by using server-side encryption with customer-provided encryption keys (SSE-C) when you store the object in Amazon S3, then when you retrieve the metadata from the object, you must use the following headers to provide the encryption key for the server to be able to retrieve the object's metadata. The headers are:
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-algorithm
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key-MD5
For more information about SSE-C, see Server-Side Encryption (Using Customer-Provided Encryption Keys) in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: SSE-S3 and SSE-KMS. SSE-C isn't supported. For more information, see Protecting data with server-side encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide. - Versioning
If the current version of the object is a delete marker, Amazon S3 behaves as if the object was deleted and includes
x-amz-delete-marker: true
in the response.If the specified version is a delete marker, the response returns a
405 Method Not Allowed
error and theLast-Modified: timestamp
response header.
* Directory buckets - Delete marker is not supported by directory buckets. - Directory buckets - S3 Versioning isn't enabled and supported
for directory buckets. For this API operation, only the
null
value of the version ID is supported by directory buckets. You can only specifynull
to theversionId
query parameter in the request.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.For directory buckets, you must make requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following actions are related to HeadObject
:
The following waiters are defined for this operation (see #wait_until for detailed usage):
- object_exists
- object_not_exists
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10207 def head_object(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:head_object, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_bucket_analytics_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketAnalyticsConfigurationsOutput
Lists the analytics configurations for the bucket. You can have up to 1,000 analytics configurations per bucket.
This action supports list pagination and does not return more than 100
configurations at a time. You should always check the IsTruncated
element in the response. If there are no more configurations to list,
IsTruncated
is set to false. If there are more configurations to
list, IsTruncated
is set to true, and there will be a value in
NextContinuationToken
. You use the NextContinuationToken
value to
continue the pagination of the list by passing the value in
continuation-token in the request to GET
the next page.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:GetAnalyticsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about Amazon S3 analytics feature, see Amazon S3 Analytics – Storage Class Analysis.
The following operations are related to
ListBucketAnalyticsConfigurations
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10308 def list_bucket_analytics_configurations(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_bucket_analytics_configurations, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurationsOutput
Lists the S3 Intelligent-Tiering configuration from the specified bucket.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is designed to optimize storage costs by automatically moving data to the most cost-effective storage access tier, without performance impact or operational overhead. S3 Intelligent-Tiering delivers automatic cost savings in three low latency and high throughput access tiers. To get the lowest storage cost on data that can be accessed in minutes to hours, you can choose to activate additional archiving capabilities.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is the ideal storage class for data with unknown, changing, or unpredictable access patterns, independent of object size or retention period. If the size of an object is less than 128 KB, it is not monitored and not eligible for auto-tiering. Smaller objects can be stored, but they are always charged at the Frequent Access tier rates in the S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class.
For more information, see Storage class for automatically optimizing frequently and infrequently accessed objects.
Operations related to ListBucketIntelligentTieringConfigurations
include:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10400 def list_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configurations(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configurations, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_bucket_inventory_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketInventoryConfigurationsOutput
Returns a list of inventory configurations for the bucket. You can have up to 1,000 analytics configurations per bucket.
This action supports list pagination and does not return more than 100
configurations at a time. Always check the IsTruncated
element in
the response. If there are no more configurations to list,
IsTruncated
is set to false. If there are more configurations to
list, IsTruncated
is set to true, and there is a value in
NextContinuationToken
. You use the NextContinuationToken
value to
continue the pagination of the list by passing the value in
continuation-token in the request to GET
the next page.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:GetInventoryConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about the Amazon S3 inventory feature, see Amazon S3 Inventory
The following operations are related to
ListBucketInventoryConfigurations
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10502 def list_bucket_inventory_configurations(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_bucket_inventory_configurations, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_bucket_metrics_configurations(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketMetricsConfigurationsOutput
Lists the metrics configurations for the bucket. The metrics configurations are only for the request metrics of the bucket and do not provide information on daily storage metrics. You can have up to 1,000 configurations per bucket.
This action supports list pagination and does not return more than 100
configurations at a time. Always check the IsTruncated
element in
the response. If there are no more configurations to list,
IsTruncated
is set to false. If there are more configurations to
list, IsTruncated
is set to true, and there is a value in
NextContinuationToken
. You use the NextContinuationToken
value to
continue the pagination of the list by passing the value in
continuation-token
in the request to GET
the next page.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:GetMetricsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For more information about metrics configurations and CloudWatch request metrics, see Monitoring Metrics with Amazon CloudWatch.
The following operations are related to
ListBucketMetricsConfigurations
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10604 def list_bucket_metrics_configurations(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_bucket_metrics_configurations, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_buckets(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListBucketsOutput
Returns a list of all buckets owned by the authenticated sender of the
request. To use this operation, you must have the
s3:ListAllMyBuckets
permission.
For information about Amazon S3 buckets, see Creating, configuring, and working with Amazon S3 buckets.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10725 def list_buckets(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_buckets, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_directory_buckets(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListDirectoryBucketsOutput
Returns a list of all Amazon S3 directory buckets owned by the authenticated sender of the request. For more information about directory buckets, see Directory buckets in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
.
Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information,
see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
You must have the
s3express:ListAllMyDirectoryBuckets
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 10803 def list_directory_buckets(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_directory_buckets, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_multipart_uploads(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListMultipartUploadsOutput
This operation lists in-progress multipart uploads in a bucket. An
in-progress multipart upload is a multipart upload that has been
initiated by the CreateMultipartUpload
request, but has not yet been
completed or aborted.
ListMultipartUploads
operation to list the in-progress multipart uploads in the bucket and
use the AbortMultupartUpload
operation to abort all the in-progress
multipart uploads.
The ListMultipartUploads
operation returns a maximum of 1,000
multipart uploads in the response. The limit of 1,000 multipart
uploads is also the default value. You can further limit the number of
uploads in a response by specifying the max-uploads
request
parameter. If there are more than 1,000 multipart uploads that satisfy
your ListMultipartUploads
request, the response returns an
IsTruncated
element with the value of true
, a NextKeyMarker
element, and a NextUploadIdMarker
element. To list the remaining
multipart uploads, you need to make subsequent ListMultipartUploads
requests. In these requests, include two query parameters:
key-marker
and upload-id-marker
. Set the value of key-marker
to
the NextKeyMarker
value from the previous response. Similarly, set
the value of upload-id-marker
to the NextUploadIdMarker
value from
the previous response.
upload-id-marker
element and the
NextUploadIdMarker
element aren't supported by directory buckets.
To list the additional multipart uploads, you only need to set the
value of key-marker
to the NextKeyMarker
value from the previous
response.
For more information about multipart uploads, see Uploading Objects Using Multipart Upload in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - For information about permissions required to use the multipart upload API, see Multipart Upload and Permissions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.
- Sorting of multipart uploads in response
General purpose bucket - In the
ListMultipartUploads
response, the multipart uploads are sorted based on two criteria:Key-based sorting - Multipart uploads are initially sorted in ascending order based on their object keys.
Time-based sorting - For uploads that share the same object key, they are further sorted in ascending order based on the upload initiation time. Among uploads with the same key, the one that was initiated first will appear before the ones that were initiated later.
Directory bucket - In the
ListMultipartUploads
response, the multipart uploads aren't sorted lexicographically based on the object keys.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to ListMultipartUploads
:
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 11243 def list_multipart_uploads(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_multipart_uploads, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_object_versions(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListObjectVersionsOutput
Returns metadata about all versions of the objects in a bucket. You can also use request parameters as selection criteria to return metadata about a subset of all the object versions.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:ListBucketVersions
action. Be aware of the name difference.
200 OK
response can contain valid or invalid XML. Make sure to
design your application to parse the contents of the response and
handle it appropriately.
To use this operation, you must have READ access to the bucket.
The following operations are related to ListObjectVersions
:
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 11482 def list_object_versions(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_object_versions, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_objects(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListObjectsOutput
Returns some or all (up to 1,000) of the objects in a bucket. You can use the request parameters as selection criteria to return a subset of the objects in a bucket. A 200 OK response can contain valid or invalid XML. Be sure to design your application to parse the contents of the response and handle it appropriately.
This action has been revised. We recommend that you use the newer
version, ListObjectsV2, when developing applications. For
backward compatibility, Amazon S3 continues to support ListObjects
.
The following operations are related to ListObjects
:
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 11716 def list_objects(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_objects, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_objects_v2(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListObjectsV2Output
Returns some or all (up to 1,000) of the objects in a bucket with each
request. You can use the request parameters as selection criteria to
return a subset of the objects in a bucket. A 200 OK
response can
contain valid or invalid XML. Make sure to design your application to
parse the contents of the response and handle it appropriately. For
more information about listing objects, see Listing object keys
programmatically in the Amazon S3 User Guide. To get a list of
your buckets, see ListBuckets.
ListObjectsV2
doesn't return prefixes that are related only to
in-progress multipart uploads.
Directory buckets - For directory buckets,
ListObjectsV2
response includes the prefixes that are related only to in-progress multipart uploads.Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - To use this operation, you must have READ access to the bucket. You must have permission to perform the
s3:ListBucket
action. The bucket owner has this permission by default and can grant this permission to others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.
- Sorting order of returned objects
General purpose bucket - For general purpose buckets,
ListObjectsV2
returns objects in lexicographical order based on their key names.Directory bucket - For directory buckets,
ListObjectsV2
does not return objects in lexicographical order.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
This section describes the latest revision of this action. We recommend that you use this revised API operation for application development. For backward compatibility, Amazon S3 continues to support the prior version of this API operation, ListObjects.
The following operations are related to ListObjectsV2
:
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 12056 def list_objects_v2(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_objects_v2, params) req.send_request() end |
#list_parts(params = {}) ⇒ Types::ListPartsOutput
Lists the parts that have been uploaded for a specific multipart upload.
To use this operation, you must provide the upload ID
in the
request. You obtain this uploadID by sending the initiate multipart
upload request through CreateMultipartUpload.
The ListParts
request returns a maximum of 1,000 uploaded parts. The
limit of 1,000 parts is also the default value. You can restrict the
number of parts in a response by specifying the max-parts
request
parameter. If your multipart upload consists of more than 1,000 parts,
the response returns an IsTruncated
field with the value of true
,
and a NextPartNumberMarker
element. To list remaining uploaded
parts, in subsequent ListParts
requests, include the
part-number-marker
query string parameter and set its value to the
NextPartNumberMarker
field value from the previous response.
For more information on multipart uploads, see Uploading Objects Using Multipart Upload in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - For information about permissions required to use the multipart upload API, see Multipart Upload and Permissions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
If the upload was created using server-side encryption with Key Management Service (KMS) keys (SSE-KMS) or dual-layer server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS keys (DSSE-KMS), you must have permission to the
kms:Decrypt
action for theListParts
request to succeed.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to ListParts
:
The returned response is a pageable response and is Enumerable. For details on usage see PageableResponse.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 12376 def list_parts(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:list_parts, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_accelerate_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets the accelerate configuration of an existing bucket. Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration is a bucket-level feature that enables you to perform faster data transfers to Amazon S3.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:PutAccelerateConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
The Transfer Acceleration state of a bucket can be set to one of the following two values:
Enabled – Enables accelerated data transfers to the bucket.
Suspended – Disables accelerated data transfers to the bucket.
The GetBucketAccelerateConfiguration action returns the transfer acceleration state of a bucket.
After setting the Transfer Acceleration state of a bucket to Enabled, it might take up to thirty minutes before the data transfer rates to the bucket increase.
The name of the bucket used for Transfer Acceleration must be DNS-compliant and must not contain periods (".").
For more information about transfer acceleration, see Transfer Acceleration.
The following operations are related to
PutBucketAccelerateConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 12475 def put_bucket_accelerate_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_accelerate_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets the permissions on an existing bucket using access control lists
(ACL). For more information, see Using ACLs. To set the ACL of a
bucket, you must have the WRITE_ACP
permission.
You can use one of the following two ways to set a bucket's permissions:
Specify the ACL in the request body
Specify permissions using request headers
Depending on your application needs, you may choose to set the ACL on a bucket using either the request body or the headers. For example, if you have an existing application that updates a bucket ACL using the request body, then you can continue to use that approach.
If your bucket uses the bucket owner enforced setting for S3 Object
Ownership, ACLs are disabled and no longer affect permissions. You
must use policies to grant access to your bucket and the objects in
it. Requests to set ACLs or update ACLs fail and return the
AccessControlListNotSupported
error code. Requests to read ACLs are
still supported. For more information, see Controlling object
ownership in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
You can set access permissions by using one of the following methods:
Specify a canned ACL with the
x-amz-acl
request header. Amazon S3 supports a set of predefined ACLs, known as canned ACLs. Each canned ACL has a predefined set of grantees and permissions. Specify the canned ACL name as the value ofx-amz-acl
. If you use this header, you cannot use other access control-specific headers in your request. For more information, see Canned ACL.Specify access permissions explicitly with the
x-amz-grant-read
,x-amz-grant-read-acp
,x-amz-grant-write-acp
, andx-amz-grant-full-control
headers. When using these headers, you specify explicit access permissions and grantees (Amazon Web Services accounts or Amazon S3 groups) who will receive the permission. If you use these ACL-specific headers, you cannot use thex-amz-acl
header to set a canned ACL. These parameters map to the set of permissions that Amazon S3 supports in an ACL. For more information, see Access Control List (ACL) Overview.You specify each grantee as a type=value pair, where the type is one of the following:
id
– if the value specified is the canonical user ID of an Amazon Web Services accounturi
– if you are granting permissions to a predefined groupemailAddress
– if the value specified is the email address of an Amazon Web Services accountUsing email addresses to specify a grantee is only supported in the following Amazon Web Services Regions: US East (N. Virginia)
US West (N. California)
US West (Oregon)
Asia Pacific (Singapore)
Asia Pacific (Sydney)
Asia Pacific (Tokyo)
Europe (Ireland)
South America (São Paulo)
For a list of all the Amazon S3 supported Regions and endpoints, see Regions and Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
For example, the following
x-amz-grant-write
header grants create, overwrite, and delete objects permission to LogDelivery group predefined by Amazon S3 and two Amazon Web Services accounts identified by their email addresses.x-amz-grant-write: uri="http://acs.amazonaws.com/groups/s3/LogDelivery", id="111122223333", id="555566667777"
You can use either a canned ACL or specify access permissions explicitly. You cannot do both.
- Grantee Values
You can specify the person (grantee) to whom you're assigning access rights (using request elements) in the following ways:
By the person's ID:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="CanonicalUser"><ID><>ID<></ID><DisplayName><>GranteesEmail<></DisplayName> </Grantee>
DisplayName is optional and ignored in the request
By URI:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="Group"><URI><>http://acs.amazonaws.com/groups/global/AuthenticatedUsers<></URI></Grantee>
By Email address:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="AmazonCustomerByEmail"><EmailAddress><>Grantees@email.com<></EmailAddress>&</Grantee>
The grantee is resolved to the CanonicalUser and, in a response to a GET Object acl request, appears as the CanonicalUser.
Using email addresses to specify a grantee is only supported in the following Amazon Web Services Regions: US East (N. Virginia)
US West (N. California)
US West (Oregon)
Asia Pacific (Singapore)
Asia Pacific (Sydney)
Asia Pacific (Tokyo)
Europe (Ireland)
South America (São Paulo)
For a list of all the Amazon S3 supported Regions and endpoints, see Regions and Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
The following operations are related to PutBucketAcl
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 12769 def put_bucket_acl(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_acl, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets an analytics configuration for the bucket (specified by the analytics configuration ID). You can have up to 1,000 analytics configurations per bucket.
You can choose to have storage class analysis export analysis reports
sent to a comma-separated values (CSV) flat file. See the DataExport
request element. Reports are updated daily and are based on the object
filters that you configure. When selecting data export, you specify a
destination bucket and an optional destination prefix where the file
is written. You can export the data to a destination bucket in a
different account. However, the destination bucket must be in the same
Region as the bucket that you are making the PUT analytics
configuration to. For more information, see Amazon S3 Analytics –
Storage Class Analysis.
You must create a bucket policy on the destination bucket where the exported file is written to grant permissions to Amazon S3 to write objects to the bucket. For an example policy, see Granting Permissions for Amazon S3 Inventory and Storage Class Analysis.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutAnalyticsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
PutBucketAnalyticsConfiguration
has the following special errors:
HTTP Error: HTTP 400 Bad Request
Code: InvalidArgument
Cause: Invalid argument.
HTTP Error: HTTP 400 Bad Request
Code: TooManyConfigurations
Cause: You are attempting to create a new configuration but have already reached the 1,000-configuration limit.
HTTP Error: HTTP 403 Forbidden
Code: AccessDenied
Cause: You are not the owner of the specified bucket, or you do not have the s3:PutAnalyticsConfiguration bucket permission to set the configuration on the bucket.
The following operations are related to
PutBucketAnalyticsConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 12907 def put_bucket_analytics_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_analytics_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_cors(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets the cors
configuration for your bucket. If the configuration
exists, Amazon S3 replaces it.
To use this operation, you must be allowed to perform the
s3:PutBucketCORS
action. By default, the bucket owner has this
permission and can grant it to others.
You set this configuration on a bucket so that the bucket can service
cross-origin requests. For example, you might want to enable a request
whose origin is http://www.example.com
to access your Amazon S3
bucket at my.example.bucket.com
by using the browser's
XMLHttpRequest
capability.
To enable cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) on a bucket, you add
the cors
subresource to the bucket. The cors
subresource is an XML
document in which you configure rules that identify origins and the
HTTP methods that can be executed on your bucket. The document is
limited to 64 KB in size.
When Amazon S3 receives a cross-origin request (or a pre-flight
OPTIONS request) against a bucket, it evaluates the cors
configuration on the bucket and uses the first CORSRule
rule that
matches the incoming browser request to enable a cross-origin request.
For a rule to match, the following conditions must be met:
The request's
Origin
header must matchAllowedOrigin
elements.The request method (for example, GET, PUT, HEAD, and so on) or the
Access-Control-Request-Method
header in case of a pre-flightOPTIONS
request must be one of theAllowedMethod
elements.Every header specified in the
Access-Control-Request-Headers
request header of a pre-flight request must match anAllowedHeader
element.
For more information about CORS, go to Enabling Cross-Origin Resource Sharing in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The following operations are related to PutBucketCors
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 13086 def put_bucket_cors(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_cors, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_encryption(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This operation configures default encryption and Amazon S3 Bucket Keys for an existing bucket.
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
.
Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information,
see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
By default, all buckets have a default encryption configuration that uses server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3).
You can optionally configure default encryption for a bucket by using server-side encryption with Key Management Service (KMS) keys (SSE-KMS) or dual-layer server-side encryption with Amazon Web Services KMS keys (DSSE-KMS). If you specify default encryption by using SSE-KMS, you can also configure Amazon S3 Bucket Keys. For information about the bucket default encryption feature, see Amazon S3 Bucket Default Encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
If you use PutBucketEncryption to set your default bucket encryption to SSE-KMS, you should verify that your KMS key ID is correct. Amazon S3 doesn't validate the KMS key ID provided in PutBucketEncryption requests.
Directory buckets - You can optionally configure default encryption for a bucket by using server-side encryption with Key Management Service (KMS) keys (SSE-KMS).
We recommend that the bucket's default encryption uses the desired encryption configuration and you don't override the bucket default encryption in your
CreateSession
requests orPUT
object requests. Then, new objects are automatically encrypted with the desired encryption settings. For more information about the encryption overriding behaviors in directory buckets, see Specifying server-side encryption with KMS for new object uploads.Your SSE-KMS configuration can only support 1 customer managed key per directory bucket for the lifetime of the bucket. The Amazon Web Services managed key (
aws/s3
) isn't supported.S3 Bucket Keys are always enabled for
GET
andPUT
operations in a directory bucket and can’t be disabled. S3 Bucket Keys aren't supported, when you copy SSE-KMS encrypted objects from general purpose buckets to directory buckets, from directory buckets to general purpose buckets, or between directory buckets, through CopyObject, UploadPartCopy, the Copy operation in Batch Operations, or the import jobs. In this case, Amazon S3 makes a call to KMS every time a copy request is made for a KMS-encrypted object.When you specify an KMS customer managed key for encryption in your directory bucket, only use the key ID or key ARN. The key alias format of the KMS key isn't supported.
For directory buckets, if you use PutBucketEncryption to set your default bucket encryption to SSE-KMS, Amazon S3 validates the KMS key ID provided in PutBucketEncryption requests.
If you're specifying a customer managed KMS key, we recommend using a fully qualified KMS key ARN. If you use a KMS key alias instead, then KMS resolves the key within the requester’s account. This behavior can result in data that's encrypted with a KMS key that belongs to the requester, and not the bucket owner.
Also, this action requires Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4. For more information, see Authenticating Requests (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4).
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - The
s3:PutEncryptionConfiguration
permission is required in a policy. The bucket owner has this permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation, you must have the
s3express:PutEncryptionConfiguration
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.To set a directory bucket default encryption with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
and thekms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the target KMS key.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to PutBucketEncryption
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 13315 def put_bucket_encryption(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_encryption, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Puts a S3 Intelligent-Tiering configuration to the specified bucket. You can have up to 1,000 S3 Intelligent-Tiering configurations per bucket.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is designed to optimize storage costs by automatically moving data to the most cost-effective storage access tier, without performance impact or operational overhead. S3 Intelligent-Tiering delivers automatic cost savings in three low latency and high throughput access tiers. To get the lowest storage cost on data that can be accessed in minutes to hours, you can choose to activate additional archiving capabilities.
The S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class is the ideal storage class for data with unknown, changing, or unpredictable access patterns, independent of object size or retention period. If the size of an object is less than 128 KB, it is not monitored and not eligible for auto-tiering. Smaller objects can be stored, but they are always charged at the Frequent Access tier rates in the S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage class.
For more information, see Storage class for automatically optimizing frequently and infrequently accessed objects.
Operations related to PutBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration
include:
PutBucketIntelligentTieringConfiguration
has the following special
errors:
- HTTP 400 Bad Request Error
Code: InvalidArgument
Cause: Invalid Argument
- HTTP 400 Bad Request Error
Code: TooManyConfigurations
Cause: You are attempting to create a new configuration but have already reached the 1,000-configuration limit.
- HTTP 403 Forbidden Error
Cause: You are not the owner of the specified bucket, or you do not have the
s3:PutIntelligentTieringConfiguration
bucket permission to set the configuration on the bucket.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 13440 def put_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_intelligent_tiering_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
This implementation of the PUT
action adds an inventory
configuration (identified by the inventory ID) to the bucket. You can
have up to 1,000 inventory configurations per bucket.
Amazon S3 inventory generates inventories of the objects in the bucket on a daily or weekly basis, and the results are published to a flat file. The bucket that is inventoried is called the source bucket, and the bucket where the inventory flat file is stored is called the destination bucket. The destination bucket must be in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the source bucket.
When you configure an inventory for a source bucket, you specify the destination bucket where you want the inventory to be stored, and whether to generate the inventory daily or weekly. You can also configure what object metadata to include and whether to inventory all object versions or only current versions. For more information, see Amazon S3 Inventory in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
You must create a bucket policy on the destination bucket to grant permissions to Amazon S3 to write objects to the bucket in the defined location. For an example policy, see Granting Permissions for Amazon S3 Inventory and Storage Class Analysis.
- Permissions
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:PutInventoryConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this permission by default and can grant this permission to others.The
s3:PutInventoryConfiguration
permission allows a user to create an S3 Inventory report that includes all object metadata fields available and to specify the destination bucket to store the inventory. A user with read access to objects in the destination bucket can also access all object metadata fields that are available in the inventory report.To restrict access to an inventory report, see Restricting access to an Amazon S3 Inventory report in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about the metadata fields available in S3 Inventory, see Amazon S3 Inventory lists in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For more information about permissions, see Permissions related to bucket subresource operations and Identity and access management in Amazon S3 in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
PutBucketInventoryConfiguration
has the following special errors:
- HTTP 400 Bad Request Error
Code: InvalidArgument
Cause: Invalid Argument
- HTTP 400 Bad Request Error
Code: TooManyConfigurations
Cause: You are attempting to create a new configuration but have already reached the 1,000-configuration limit.
- HTTP 403 Forbidden Error
Cause: You are not the owner of the specified bucket, or you do not have the
s3:PutInventoryConfiguration
bucket permission to set the configuration on the bucket.
The following operations are related to
PutBucketInventoryConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 13592 def put_bucket_inventory_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_inventory_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
For an updated version of this API, see PutBucketLifecycleConfiguration. This version has been deprecated. Existing lifecycle configurations will work. For new lifecycle configurations, use the updated API.
Creates a new lifecycle configuration for the bucket or replaces an existing lifecycle configuration. For information about lifecycle configuration, see Object Lifecycle Management in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
By default, all Amazon S3 resources, including buckets, objects, and
related subresources (for example, lifecycle configuration and website
configuration) are private. Only the resource owner, the Amazon Web
Services account that created the resource, can access it. The
resource owner can optionally grant access permissions to others by
writing an access policy. For this operation, users must get the
s3:PutLifecycleConfiguration
permission.
You can also explicitly deny permissions. Explicit denial also supersedes any other permissions. If you want to prevent users or accounts from removing or deleting objects from your bucket, you must deny them permissions for the following actions:
s3:DeleteObject
s3:DeleteObjectVersion
s3:PutLifecycleConfiguration
For more information about permissions, see Managing Access Permissions to your Amazon S3 Resources in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
For more examples of transitioning objects to storage classes such as STANDARD_IA or ONEZONE_IA, see Examples of Lifecycle Configuration.
The following operations are related to PutBucketLifecycle
:
GetBucketLifecycle(Deprecated)
By default, a resource owner—in this case, a bucket owner, which is the Amazon Web Services account that created the bucket—can perform any of the operations. A resource owner can also grant others permission to perform the operation. For more information, see the following topics in the Amazon S3 User Guide:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 13743 def put_bucket_lifecycle(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_lifecycle, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_lifecycle_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutBucketLifecycleConfigurationOutput
Creates a new lifecycle configuration for the bucket or replaces an existing lifecycle configuration. Keep in mind that this will overwrite an existing lifecycle configuration, so if you want to retain any configuration details, they must be included in the new lifecycle configuration. For information about lifecycle configuration, see Managing your storage lifecycle.
- Rules
You specify the lifecycle configuration in your request body. The lifecycle configuration is specified as XML consisting of one or more rules. An Amazon S3 Lifecycle configuration can have up to 1,000 rules. This limit is not adjustable.
Bucket lifecycle configuration supports specifying a lifecycle rule using an object key name prefix, one or more object tags, object size, or any combination of these. Accordingly, this section describes the latest API. The previous version of the API supported filtering based only on an object key name prefix, which is supported for backward compatibility. For the related API description, see PutBucketLifecycle.
A lifecycle rule consists of the following:
A filter identifying a subset of objects to which the rule applies. The filter can be based on a key name prefix, object tags, object size, or any combination of these.
A status indicating whether the rule is in effect.
One or more lifecycle transition and expiration actions that you want Amazon S3 to perform on the objects identified by the filter. If the state of your bucket is versioning-enabled or versioning-suspended, you can have many versions of the same object (one current version and zero or more noncurrent versions). Amazon S3 provides predefined actions that you can specify for current and noncurrent object versions.
For more information, see Object Lifecycle Management and Lifecycle Configuration Elements.
- Permissions
By default, all Amazon S3 resources are private, including buckets, objects, and related subresources (for example, lifecycle configuration and website configuration). Only the resource owner (that is, the Amazon Web Services account that created it) can access the resource. The resource owner can optionally grant access permissions to others by writing an access policy. For this operation, a user must get the
s3:PutLifecycleConfiguration
permission.You can also explicitly deny permissions. An explicit deny also supersedes any other permissions. If you want to block users or accounts from removing or deleting objects from your bucket, you must deny them permissions for the following actions:
s3:DeleteObject
s3:DeleteObjectVersion
s3:PutLifecycleConfiguration
For more information about permissions, see Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
The following operations are related to
PutBucketLifecycleConfiguration
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 13987 def put_bucket_lifecycle_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_lifecycle_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_logging(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Set the logging parameters for a bucket and to specify permissions for who can view and modify the logging parameters. All logs are saved to buckets in the same Amazon Web Services Region as the source bucket. To set the logging status of a bucket, you must be the bucket owner.
The bucket owner is automatically granted FULL_CONTROL to all logs.
You use the Grantee
request element to grant access to other people.
The Permissions
request element specifies the kind of access the
grantee has to the logs.
If the target bucket for log delivery uses the bucket owner enforced
setting for S3 Object Ownership, you can't use the Grantee
request
element to grant access to others. Permissions can only be granted
using policies. For more information, see Permissions for server
access log delivery in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Grantee Values
You can specify the person (grantee) to whom you're assigning access rights (by using request elements) in the following ways:
By the person's ID:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="CanonicalUser"><ID><>ID<></ID><DisplayName><>GranteesEmail<></DisplayName> </Grantee>
DisplayName
is optional and ignored in the request.By Email address:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="AmazonCustomerByEmail"><EmailAddress><>Grantees@email.com<></EmailAddress></Grantee>
The grantee is resolved to the
CanonicalUser
and, in a response to aGETObjectAcl
request, appears as the CanonicalUser.By URI:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="Group"><URI><>http://acs.amazonaws.com/groups/global/AuthenticatedUsers<></URI></Grantee>
To enable logging, you use LoggingEnabled
and its children request
elements. To disable logging, you use an empty BucketLoggingStatus
request element:
<BucketLoggingStatus xmlns="http://doc.s3.amazonaws.com/2006-03-01"
/>
For more information about server access logging, see Server Access Logging in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
For more information about creating a bucket, see CreateBucket. For more information about returning the logging status of a bucket, see GetBucketLogging.
The following operations are related to PutBucketLogging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 14170 def put_bucket_logging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_logging, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets a metrics configuration (specified by the metrics configuration ID) for the bucket. You can have up to 1,000 metrics configurations per bucket. If you're updating an existing metrics configuration, note that this is a full replacement of the existing metrics configuration. If you don't include the elements you want to keep, they are erased.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutMetricsConfiguration
action. The bucket owner has this
permission by default. The bucket owner can grant this permission to
others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions
Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access
Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
For information about CloudWatch request metrics for Amazon S3, see Monitoring Metrics with Amazon CloudWatch.
The following operations are related to
PutBucketMetricsConfiguration
:
PutBucketMetricsConfiguration
has the following special error:
Error code:
TooManyConfigurations
Description: You are attempting to create a new configuration but have already reached the 1,000-configuration limit.
HTTP Status Code: HTTP 400 Bad Request
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 14274 def put_bucket_metrics_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_metrics_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_notification(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
No longer used, see the PutBucketNotificationConfiguration operation.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 14360 def put_bucket_notification(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_notification, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_notification_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Enables notifications of specified events for a bucket. For more information about event notifications, see Configuring Event Notifications.
Using this API, you can replace an existing notification configuration. The configuration is an XML file that defines the event types that you want Amazon S3 to publish and the destination where you want Amazon S3 to publish an event notification when it detects an event of the specified type.
By default, your bucket has no event notifications configured. That
is, the notification configuration will be an empty
NotificationConfiguration
.
<NotificationConfiguration>
</NotificationConfiguration>
This action replaces the existing notification configuration with the configuration you include in the request body.
After Amazon S3 receives this request, it first verifies that any Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS) or Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS) destination exists, and that the bucket owner has permission to publish to it by sending a test notification. In the case of Lambda destinations, Amazon S3 verifies that the Lambda function permissions grant Amazon S3 permission to invoke the function from the Amazon S3 bucket. For more information, see Configuring Notifications for Amazon S3 Events.
You can disable notifications by adding the empty NotificationConfiguration element.
For more information about the number of event notification configurations that you can create per bucket, see Amazon S3 service quotas in Amazon Web Services General Reference.
By default, only the bucket owner can configure notifications on a
bucket. However, bucket owners can use a bucket policy to grant
permission to other users to set this configuration with the required
s3:PutBucketNotification
permission.
If the configuration in the request body includes only one
TopicConfiguration
specifying only the
s3:ReducedRedundancyLostObject
event type, the response will also
include the x-amz-sns-test-message-id
header containing the message
ID of the test notification sent to the topic.
The following action is related to
PutBucketNotificationConfiguration
:
^
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 14544 def put_bucket_notification_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_notification_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Creates or modifies OwnershipControls
for an Amazon S3 bucket. To
use this operation, you must have the s3:PutBucketOwnershipControls
permission. For more information about Amazon S3 permissions, see
Specifying permissions in a policy.
For information about Amazon S3 Object Ownership, see Using object ownership.
The following operations are related to PutBucketOwnershipControls
:
GetBucketOwnershipControls
DeleteBucketOwnershipControls
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 14613 def put_bucket_ownership_controls(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_ownership_controls, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_policy(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Applies an Amazon S3 bucket policy to an Amazon S3 bucket.
https://s3express-control.region_code.amazonaws.com/bucket-name
.
Virtual-hosted-style requests aren't supported. For more information,
see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
If you are using an identity other than the root user of the Amazon Web Services account that owns the bucket, the calling identity must both have the
PutBucketPolicy
permissions on the specified bucket and belong to the bucket owner's account in order to use this operation.If you don't have
PutBucketPolicy
permissions, Amazon S3 returns a403 Access Denied
error. If you have the correct permissions, but you're not using an identity that belongs to the bucket owner's account, Amazon S3 returns a405 Method Not Allowed
error.To ensure that bucket owners don't inadvertently lock themselves out of their own buckets, the root principal in a bucket owner's Amazon Web Services account can perform the
GetBucketPolicy
,PutBucketPolicy
, andDeleteBucketPolicy
API actions, even if their bucket policy explicitly denies the root principal's access. Bucket owner root principals can only be blocked from performing these API actions by VPC endpoint policies and Amazon Web Services Organizations policies.General purpose bucket permissions - The
s3:PutBucketPolicy
permission is required in a policy. For more information about general purpose buckets bucket policies, see Using Bucket Policies and User Policies in the Amazon S3 User Guide.Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation, you must have the
s3express:PutBucketPolicy
permission in an IAM identity-based policy instead of a bucket policy. Cross-account access to this API operation isn't supported. This operation can only be performed by the Amazon Web Services account that owns the resource. For more information about directory bucket policies and permissions, see Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Example bucket policies
General purpose buckets example bucket policies - See Bucket policy examples in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket example bucket policies - See Example bucket policies for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
s3express-control.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to PutBucketPolicy
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 14813 def put_bucket_policy(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_policy, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_replication(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Creates a replication configuration or replaces an existing one. For more information, see Replication in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Specify the replication configuration in the request body. In the
replication configuration, you provide the name of the destination
bucket or buckets where you want Amazon S3 to replicate objects, the
IAM role that Amazon S3 can assume to replicate objects on your
behalf, and other relevant information. You can invoke this request
for a specific Amazon Web Services Region by using the
aws:RequestedRegion
condition key.
A replication configuration must include at least one rule, and can contain a maximum of 1,000. Each rule identifies a subset of objects to replicate by filtering the objects in the source bucket. To choose additional subsets of objects to replicate, add a rule for each subset.
To specify a subset of the objects in the source bucket to apply a
replication rule to, add the Filter element as a child of the Rule
element. You can filter objects based on an object key prefix, one or
more object tags, or both. When you add the Filter element in the
configuration, you must also add the following elements:
DeleteMarkerReplication
, Status
, and Priority
.
For information about enabling versioning on a bucket, see Using Versioning.
- Handling Replication of Encrypted Objects
By default, Amazon S3 doesn't replicate objects that are stored at rest using server-side encryption with KMS keys. To replicate Amazon Web Services KMS-encrypted objects, add the following:
SourceSelectionCriteria
,SseKmsEncryptedObjects
,Status
,EncryptionConfiguration
, andReplicaKmsKeyID
. For information about replication configuration, see Replicating Objects Created with SSE Using KMS keys.For information on
PutBucketReplication
errors, see List of replication-related error codes- Permissions
To create a
PutBucketReplication
request, you must haves3:PutReplicationConfiguration
permissions for the bucket.By default, a resource owner, in this case the Amazon Web Services account that created the bucket, can perform this operation. The resource owner can also grant others permissions to perform the operation. For more information about permissions, see Specifying Permissions in a Policy and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources.
To perform this operation, the user or role performing the action must have the iam:PassRole permission.
The following operations are related to PutBucketReplication
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 15051 def put_bucket_replication(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_replication, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_request_payment(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets the request payment configuration for a bucket. By default, the bucket owner pays for downloads from the bucket. This configuration parameter enables the bucket owner (only) to specify that the person requesting the download will be charged for the download. For more information, see Requester Pays Buckets.
The following operations are related to PutBucketRequestPayment
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 15148 def put_bucket_request_payment(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_request_payment, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets the tags for a bucket.
Use tags to organize your Amazon Web Services bill to reflect your own cost structure. To do this, sign up to get your Amazon Web Services account bill with tag key values included. Then, to see the cost of combined resources, organize your billing information according to resources with the same tag key values. For example, you can tag several resources with a specific application name, and then organize your billing information to see the total cost of that application across several services. For more information, see Cost Allocation and Tagging and Using Cost Allocation in Amazon S3 Bucket Tags.
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:PutBucketTagging
action. The bucket owner has this permission by
default and can grant this permission to others. For more information
about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Subresource
Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3
Resources.
PutBucketTagging
has the following special errors. For more Amazon
S3 errors see, Error Responses.
InvalidTag
- The tag provided was not a valid tag. This error can occur if the tag did not pass input validation. For more information, see Using Cost Allocation in Amazon S3 Bucket Tags.MalformedXML
- The XML provided does not match the schema.OperationAborted
- A conflicting conditional action is currently in progress against this resource. Please try again.InternalError
- The service was unable to apply the provided tag to the bucket.
The following operations are related to PutBucketTagging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 15299 def put_bucket_tagging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_tagging, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_versioning(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
PUT
or DELETE
) on objects in the
bucket.
Sets the versioning state of an existing bucket.
You can set the versioning state with one of the following values:
Enabled—Enables versioning for the objects in the bucket. All objects added to the bucket receive a unique version ID.
Suspended—Disables versioning for the objects in the bucket. All objects added to the bucket receive the version ID null.
If the versioning state has never been set on a bucket, it has no versioning state; a GetBucketVersioning request does not return a versioning state value.
In order to enable MFA Delete, you must be the bucket owner. If you
are the bucket owner and want to enable MFA Delete in the bucket
versioning configuration, you must include the x-amz-mfa request
header and the Status
and the MfaDelete
request elements in a
request to set the versioning state of the bucket.
If you have an object expiration lifecycle configuration in your non-versioned bucket and you want to maintain the same permanent delete behavior when you enable versioning, you must add a noncurrent expiration policy. The noncurrent expiration lifecycle configuration will manage the deletes of the noncurrent object versions in the version-enabled bucket. (A version-enabled bucket maintains one current and zero or more noncurrent object versions.) For more information, see Lifecycle and Versioning.
The following operations are related to PutBucketVersioning
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 15438 def put_bucket_versioning(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_versioning, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_bucket_website(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Sets the configuration of the website that is specified in the
website
subresource. To configure a bucket as a website, you can add
this subresource on the bucket with website configuration information
such as the file name of the index document and any redirect rules.
For more information, see Hosting Websites on Amazon S3.
This PUT action requires the S3:PutBucketWebsite
permission. By
default, only the bucket owner can configure the website attached to a
bucket; however, bucket owners can allow other users to set the
website configuration by writing a bucket policy that grants them the
S3:PutBucketWebsite
permission.
To redirect all website requests sent to the bucket's website endpoint, you add a website configuration with the following elements. Because all requests are sent to another website, you don't need to provide index document name for the bucket.
WebsiteConfiguration
RedirectAllRequestsTo
HostName
Protocol
If you want granular control over redirects, you can use the following elements to add routing rules that describe conditions for redirecting requests and information about the redirect destination. In this case, the website configuration must provide an index document for the bucket, because some requests might not be redirected.
WebsiteConfiguration
IndexDocument
Suffix
ErrorDocument
Key
RoutingRules
RoutingRule
Condition
HttpErrorCodeReturnedEquals
KeyPrefixEquals
Redirect
Protocol
HostName
ReplaceKeyPrefixWith
ReplaceKeyWith
HttpRedirectCode
Amazon S3 has a limitation of 50 routing rules per website configuration. If you require more than 50 routing rules, you can use object redirect. For more information, see Configuring an Object Redirect in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
The maximum request length is limited to 128 KB.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 15622 def put_bucket_website(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_bucket_website, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectOutput
Adds an object to a bucket.
PutObject
to only update a single piece of metadata for
an existing object. You must put the entire object with updated
metadata if you want to update some values.
If your bucket uses the bucket owner enforced setting for Object Ownership, ACLs are disabled and no longer affect permissions. All objects written to the bucket by any account will be owned by the bucket owner.
Directory buckets - For directory buckets, you must make requests for this API operation to the Zonal endpoint. These endpoints support virtual-hosted-style requests in the format
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Amazon S3 is a distributed system. If it receives multiple write requests for the same object simultaneously, it overwrites all but the last object written. However, Amazon S3 provides features that can modify this behavior:
S3 Object Lock - To prevent objects from being deleted or overwritten, you can use Amazon S3 Object Lock in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
This functionality is not supported for directory buckets. S3 Versioning - When you enable versioning for a bucket, if Amazon S3 receives multiple write requests for the same object simultaneously, it stores all versions of the objects. For each write request that is made to the same object, Amazon S3 automatically generates a unique version ID of that object being stored in Amazon S3. You can retrieve, replace, or delete any version of the object. For more information about versioning, see Adding Objects to Versioning-Enabled Buckets in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For information about returning the versioning state of a bucket, see GetBucketVersioning.
This functionality is not supported for directory buckets.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - The following permissions are required in your policies when your
PutObject
request includes specific headers.s3:PutObject
- To successfully complete thePutObject
request, you must always have thes3:PutObject
permission on a bucket to add an object to it.s3:PutObjectAcl
- To successfully change the objects ACL of yourPutObject
request, you must have thes3:PutObjectAcl
.s3:PutObjectTagging
- To successfully set the tag-set with yourPutObject
request, you must have thes3:PutObjectTagging
.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.If the object is encrypted with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.
- Data integrity with Content-MD5
General purpose bucket - To ensure that data is not corrupted traversing the network, use the
Content-MD5
header. When you use this header, Amazon S3 checks the object against the provided MD5 value and, if they do not match, Amazon S3 returns an error. Alternatively, when the object's ETag is its MD5 digest, you can calculate the MD5 while putting the object to Amazon S3 and compare the returned ETag to the calculated MD5 value.Directory bucket - This functionality is not supported for directory buckets.
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
For more information about related Amazon S3 APIs, see the following:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 16569 def put_object(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_object, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_object_acl(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectAclOutput
Uses the acl
subresource to set the access control list (ACL)
permissions for a new or existing object in an S3 bucket. You must
have the WRITE_ACP
permission to set the ACL of an object. For more
information, see What permissions can I grant? in the Amazon S3
User Guide.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
Depending on your application needs, you can choose to set the ACL on an object using either the request body or the headers. For example, if you have an existing application that updates a bucket ACL using the request body, you can continue to use that approach. For more information, see Access Control List (ACL) Overview in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
If your bucket uses the bucket owner enforced setting for S3 Object
Ownership, ACLs are disabled and no longer affect permissions. You
must use policies to grant access to your bucket and the objects in
it. Requests to set ACLs or update ACLs fail and return the
AccessControlListNotSupported
error code. Requests to read ACLs are
still supported. For more information, see Controlling object
ownership in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
You can set access permissions using one of the following methods:
Specify a canned ACL with the
x-amz-acl
request header. Amazon S3 supports a set of predefined ACLs, known as canned ACLs. Each canned ACL has a predefined set of grantees and permissions. Specify the canned ACL name as the value ofx-amz-ac
l. If you use this header, you cannot use other access control-specific headers in your request. For more information, see Canned ACL.Specify access permissions explicitly with the
x-amz-grant-read
,x-amz-grant-read-acp
,x-amz-grant-write-acp
, andx-amz-grant-full-control
headers. When using these headers, you specify explicit access permissions and grantees (Amazon Web Services accounts or Amazon S3 groups) who will receive the permission. If you use these ACL-specific headers, you cannot usex-amz-acl
header to set a canned ACL. These parameters map to the set of permissions that Amazon S3 supports in an ACL. For more information, see Access Control List (ACL) Overview.You specify each grantee as a type=value pair, where the type is one of the following:
id
– if the value specified is the canonical user ID of an Amazon Web Services accounturi
– if you are granting permissions to a predefined groupemailAddress
– if the value specified is the email address of an Amazon Web Services accountUsing email addresses to specify a grantee is only supported in the following Amazon Web Services Regions: US East (N. Virginia)
US West (N. California)
US West (Oregon)
Asia Pacific (Singapore)
Asia Pacific (Sydney)
Asia Pacific (Tokyo)
Europe (Ireland)
South America (São Paulo)
For a list of all the Amazon S3 supported Regions and endpoints, see Regions and Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
For example, the following
x-amz-grant-read
header grants list objects permission to the two Amazon Web Services accounts identified by their email addresses.x-amz-grant-read: emailAddress="xyz@amazon.com", emailAddress="abc@amazon.com"
You can use either a canned ACL or specify access permissions explicitly. You cannot do both.
- Grantee Values
You can specify the person (grantee) to whom you're assigning access rights (using request elements) in the following ways:
By the person's ID:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="CanonicalUser"><ID><>ID<></ID><DisplayName><>GranteesEmail<></DisplayName> </Grantee>
DisplayName is optional and ignored in the request.
By URI:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="Group"><URI><>http://acs.amazonaws.com/groups/global/AuthenticatedUsers<></URI></Grantee>
By Email address:
<Grantee xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:type="AmazonCustomerByEmail"><EmailAddress><>Grantees@email.com<></EmailAddress>lt;/Grantee>
The grantee is resolved to the CanonicalUser and, in a response to a GET Object acl request, appears as the CanonicalUser.
Using email addresses to specify a grantee is only supported in the following Amazon Web Services Regions: US East (N. Virginia)
US West (N. California)
US West (Oregon)
Asia Pacific (Singapore)
Asia Pacific (Sydney)
Asia Pacific (Tokyo)
Europe (Ireland)
South America (São Paulo)
For a list of all the Amazon S3 supported Regions and endpoints, see Regions and Endpoints in the Amazon Web Services General Reference.
- Versioning
The ACL of an object is set at the object version level. By default, PUT sets the ACL of the current version of an object. To set the ACL of a different version, use the
versionId
subresource.
The following operations are related to PutObjectAcl
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 16939 def put_object_acl(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_object_acl, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_object_legal_hold(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectLegalHoldOutput
Applies a legal hold configuration to the specified object. For more information, see Locking Objects.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 17058 def put_object_legal_hold(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_object_legal_hold, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_object_lock_configuration(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectLockConfigurationOutput
Places an Object Lock configuration on the specified bucket. The rule specified in the Object Lock configuration will be applied by default to every new object placed in the specified bucket. For more information, see Locking Objects.
DefaultRetention
settings require both a mode and a period.
The
DefaultRetention
period can be eitherDays
orYears
but you must select one. You cannot specifyDays
andYears
at the same time.You can enable Object Lock for new or existing buckets. For more information, see Configuring Object Lock.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 17177 def put_object_lock_configuration(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_object_lock_configuration, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_object_retention(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectRetentionOutput
Places an Object Retention configuration on an object. For more
information, see Locking Objects. Users or accounts require the
s3:PutObjectRetention
permission in order to place an Object
Retention configuration on objects. Bypassing a Governance Retention
configuration requires the s3:BypassGovernanceRetention
permission.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 17306 def put_object_retention(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_object_retention, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_object_tagging(params = {}) ⇒ Types::PutObjectTaggingOutput
Sets the supplied tag-set to an object that already exists in a bucket. A tag is a key-value pair. For more information, see Object Tagging.
You can associate tags with an object by sending a PUT request against the tagging subresource that is associated with the object. You can retrieve tags by sending a GET request. For more information, see GetObjectTagging.
For tagging-related restrictions related to characters and encodings, see Tag Restrictions. Note that Amazon S3 limits the maximum number of tags to 10 tags per object.
To use this operation, you must have permission to perform the
s3:PutObjectTagging
action. By default, the bucket owner has this
permission and can grant this permission to others.
To put tags of any other version, use the versionId
query parameter.
You also need permission for the s3:PutObjectVersionTagging
action.
PutObjectTagging
has the following special errors. For more Amazon
S3 errors see, Error Responses.
InvalidTag
- The tag provided was not a valid tag. This error can occur if the tag did not pass input validation. For more information, see Object Tagging.MalformedXML
- The XML provided does not match the schema.OperationAborted
- A conflicting conditional action is currently in progress against this resource. Please try again.InternalError
- The service was unable to apply the provided tag to the object.
The following operations are related to PutObjectTagging
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 17505 def put_object_tagging(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_object_tagging, params) req.send_request() end |
#put_public_access_block(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Creates or modifies the PublicAccessBlock
configuration for an
Amazon S3 bucket. To use this operation, you must have the
s3:PutBucketPublicAccessBlock
permission. For more information about
Amazon S3 permissions, see Specifying Permissions in a Policy.
When Amazon S3 evaluates the PublicAccessBlock
configuration for a
bucket or an object, it checks the PublicAccessBlock
configuration
for both the bucket (or the bucket that contains the object) and the
bucket owner's account. If the PublicAccessBlock
configurations are
different between the bucket and the account, Amazon S3 uses the most
restrictive combination of the bucket-level and account-level
settings.
For more information about when Amazon S3 considers a bucket or an object public, see The Meaning of "Public".
The following operations are related to PutPublicAccessBlock
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 17613 def put_public_access_block(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:put_public_access_block, params) req.send_request() end |
#restore_object(params = {}) ⇒ Types::RestoreObjectOutput
Restores an archived copy of an object back into Amazon S3
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
This action performs the following types of requests:
restore an archive
- Restore an archived object
^
For more information about the S3
structure in the request body, see
the following:
Managing Access with ACLs in the Amazon S3 User Guide
Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide
- Permissions
To use this operation, you must have permissions to perform the
s3:RestoreObject
action. The bucket owner has this permission by default and can grant this permission to others. For more information about permissions, see Permissions Related to Bucket Subresource Operations and Managing Access Permissions to Your Amazon S3 Resources in the Amazon S3 User Guide.- Restoring objects
Objects that you archive to the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval Flexible Retrieval or S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage class, and S3 Intelligent-Tiering Archive or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Deep Archive tiers, are not accessible in real time. For objects in the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval Flexible Retrieval or S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage classes, you must first initiate a restore request, and then wait until a temporary copy of the object is available. If you want a permanent copy of the object, create a copy of it in the Amazon S3 Standard storage class in your S3 bucket. To access an archived object, you must restore the object for the duration (number of days) that you specify. For objects in the Archive Access or Deep Archive Access tiers of S3 Intelligent-Tiering, you must first initiate a restore request, and then wait until the object is moved into the Frequent Access tier.
To restore a specific object version, you can provide a version ID. If you don't provide a version ID, Amazon S3 restores the current version.
When restoring an archived object, you can specify one of the following data access tier options in the
Tier
element of the request body:Expedited
- Expedited retrievals allow you to quickly access your data stored in the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval Flexible Retrieval storage class or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Archive tier when occasional urgent requests for restoring archives are required. For all but the largest archived objects (250 MB+), data accessed using Expedited retrievals is typically made available within 1–5 minutes. Provisioned capacity ensures that retrieval capacity for Expedited retrievals is available when you need it. Expedited retrievals and provisioned capacity are not available for objects stored in the S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage class or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Deep Archive tier.Standard
- Standard retrievals allow you to access any of your archived objects within several hours. This is the default option for retrieval requests that do not specify the retrieval option. Standard retrievals typically finish within 3–5 hours for objects stored in the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval Flexible Retrieval storage class or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Archive tier. They typically finish within 12 hours for objects stored in the S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage class or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Deep Archive tier. Standard retrievals are free for objects stored in S3 Intelligent-Tiering.Bulk
- Bulk retrievals free for objects stored in the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval and S3 Intelligent-Tiering storage classes, enabling you to retrieve large amounts, even petabytes, of data at no cost. Bulk retrievals typically finish within 5–12 hours for objects stored in the S3 Glacier Flexible Retrieval Flexible Retrieval storage class or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Archive tier. Bulk retrievals are also the lowest-cost retrieval option when restoring objects from S3 Glacier Deep Archive. They typically finish within 48 hours for objects stored in the S3 Glacier Deep Archive storage class or S3 Intelligent-Tiering Deep Archive tier.
For more information about archive retrieval options and provisioned capacity for
Expedited
data access, see Restoring Archived Objects in the Amazon S3 User Guide.You can use Amazon S3 restore speed upgrade to change the restore speed to a faster speed while it is in progress. For more information, see Upgrading the speed of an in-progress restore in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
To get the status of object restoration, you can send a
HEAD
request. Operations return thex-amz-restore
header, which provides information about the restoration status, in the response. You can use Amazon S3 event notifications to notify you when a restore is initiated or completed. For more information, see Configuring Amazon S3 Event Notifications in the Amazon S3 User Guide.After restoring an archived object, you can update the restoration period by reissuing the request with a new period. Amazon S3 updates the restoration period relative to the current time and charges only for the request-there are no data transfer charges. You cannot update the restoration period when Amazon S3 is actively processing your current restore request for the object.
If your bucket has a lifecycle configuration with a rule that includes an expiration action, the object expiration overrides the life span that you specify in a restore request. For example, if you restore an object copy for 10 days, but the object is scheduled to expire in 3 days, Amazon S3 deletes the object in 3 days. For more information about lifecycle configuration, see PutBucketLifecycleConfiguration and Object Lifecycle Management in Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Responses
A successful action returns either the
200 OK
or202 Accepted
status code.If the object is not previously restored, then Amazon S3 returns
202 Accepted
in the response.If the object is previously restored, Amazon S3 returns
200 OK
in the response. ^Special errors:
Code: RestoreAlreadyInProgress
Cause: Object restore is already in progress.
HTTP Status Code: 409 Conflict
SOAP Fault Code Prefix: Client
Code: GlacierExpeditedRetrievalNotAvailable
Cause: expedited retrievals are currently not available. Try again later. (Returned if there is insufficient capacity to process the Expedited request. This error applies only to Expedited retrievals and not to S3 Standard or Bulk retrievals.)
HTTP Status Code: 503
SOAP Fault Code Prefix: N/A
The following operations are related to RestoreObject
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 17998 def restore_object(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:restore_object, params) req.send_request() end |
#select_object_content(params = {}) ⇒ Types::SelectObjectContentOutput
This action filters the contents of an Amazon S3 object based on a simple structured query language (SQL) statement. In the request, along with the SQL expression, you must also specify a data serialization format (JSON, CSV, or Apache Parquet) of the object. Amazon S3 uses this format to parse object data into records, and returns only records that match the specified SQL expression. You must also specify the data serialization format for the response.
This functionality is not supported for Amazon S3 on Outposts.
For more information about Amazon S3 Select, see Selecting Content from Objects and SELECT Command in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
You must have the
s3:GetObject
permission for this operation. Amazon S3 Select does not support anonymous access. For more information about permissions, see Specifying Permissions in a Policy in the Amazon S3 User Guide.- Object Data Formats
You can use Amazon S3 Select to query objects that have the following format properties:
CSV, JSON, and Parquet - Objects must be in CSV, JSON, or Parquet format.
UTF-8 - UTF-8 is the only encoding type Amazon S3 Select supports.
GZIP or BZIP2 - CSV and JSON files can be compressed using GZIP or BZIP2. GZIP and BZIP2 are the only compression formats that Amazon S3 Select supports for CSV and JSON files. Amazon S3 Select supports columnar compression for Parquet using GZIP or Snappy. Amazon S3 Select does not support whole-object compression for Parquet objects.
Server-side encryption - Amazon S3 Select supports querying objects that are protected with server-side encryption.
For objects that are encrypted with customer-provided encryption keys (SSE-C), you must use HTTPS, and you must use the headers that are documented in the GetObject. For more information about SSE-C, see Server-Side Encryption (Using Customer-Provided Encryption Keys) in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
For objects that are encrypted with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) and Amazon Web Services KMS keys (SSE-KMS), server-side encryption is handled transparently, so you don't need to specify anything. For more information about server-side encryption, including SSE-S3 and SSE-KMS, see Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Working with the Response Body
Given the response size is unknown, Amazon S3 Select streams the response as a series of messages and includes a
Transfer-Encoding
header withchunked
as its value in the response. For more information, see Appendix: SelectObjectContent Response.- GetObject Support
The
SelectObjectContent
action does not support the followingGetObject
functionality. For more information, see GetObject.Range
: Although you can specify a scan range for an Amazon S3 Select request (see SelectObjectContentRequest - ScanRange in the request parameters), you cannot specify the range of bytes of an object to return.The
GLACIER
,DEEP_ARCHIVE
, andREDUCED_REDUNDANCY
storage classes, or theARCHIVE_ACCESS
andDEEP_ARCHIVE_ACCESS
access tiers of theINTELLIGENT_TIERING
storage class: You cannot query objects in theGLACIER
,DEEP_ARCHIVE
, orREDUCED_REDUNDANCY
storage classes, nor objects in theARCHIVE_ACCESS
orDEEP_ARCHIVE_ACCESS
access tiers of theINTELLIGENT_TIERING
storage class. For more information about storage classes, see Using Amazon S3 storage classes in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Special Errors
For a list of special errors for this operation, see List of SELECT Object Content Error Codes
The following operations are related to SelectObjectContent
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 18395 def select_object_content(params = {}, = {}, &block) params = params.dup event_stream_handler = case handler = params.delete(:event_stream_handler) when EventStreams::SelectObjectContentEventStream then handler when Proc then EventStreams::SelectObjectContentEventStream.new.tap(&handler) when nil then EventStreams::SelectObjectContentEventStream.new else msg = "expected :event_stream_handler to be a block or "\ "instance of Aws::S3::EventStreams::SelectObjectContentEventStream"\ ", got `#{handler.inspect}` instead" raise ArgumentError, msg end yield(event_stream_handler) if block_given? req = build_request(:select_object_content, params) req.context[:event_stream_handler] = event_stream_handler req.handlers.add(Aws::Binary::DecodeHandler, priority: 95) req.send_request(, &block) end |
#upload_part(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UploadPartOutput
Uploads a part in a multipart upload.
You must initiate a multipart upload (see CreateMultipartUpload) before you can upload any part. In response to your initiate request, Amazon S3 returns an upload ID, a unique identifier that you must include in your upload part request.
Part numbers can be any number from 1 to 10,000, inclusive. A part number uniquely identifies a part and also defines its position within the object being created. If you upload a new part using the same part number that was used with a previous part, the previously uploaded part is overwritten.
For information about maximum and minimum part sizes and other multipart upload specifications, see Multipart upload limits in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
For more information on multipart uploads, go to Multipart Upload Overview in the Amazon S3 User Guide .
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Permissions
General purpose bucket permissions - To perform a multipart upload with encryption using an Key Management Service key, the requester must have permission to the
kms:Decrypt
andkms:GenerateDataKey
actions on the key. The requester must also have permissions for thekms:GenerateDataKey
action for theCreateMultipartUpload
API. Then, the requester needs permissions for thekms:Decrypt
action on theUploadPart
andUploadPartCopy
APIs.These permissions are required because Amazon S3 must decrypt and read data from the encrypted file parts before it completes the multipart upload. For more information about KMS permissions, see Protecting data using server-side encryption with KMS in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For information about the permissions required to use the multipart upload API, see Multipart upload and permissions and Multipart upload API and permissions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket permissions - To grant access to this API operation on a directory bucket, we recommend that you use the
CreateSession
API operation for session-based authorization. Specifically, you grant thes3express:CreateSession
permission to the directory bucket in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make theCreateSession
API call on the bucket to obtain a session token. With the session token in your request header, you can make API requests to this operation. After the session token expires, you make anotherCreateSession
API call to generate a new session token for use. Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs create session and refresh the session token automatically to avoid service interruptions when a session expires. For more information about authorization, seeCreateSession
.If the object is encrypted with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.
- Data integrity
General purpose bucket - To ensure that data is not corrupted traversing the network, specify the
Content-MD5
header in the upload part request. Amazon S3 checks the part data against the provided MD5 value. If they do not match, Amazon S3 returns an error. If the upload request is signed with Signature Version 4, then Amazon Web Services S3 uses thex-amz-content-sha256
header as a checksum instead ofContent-MD5
. For more information see Authenticating Requests: Using the Authorization Header (Amazon Web Services Signature Version 4).Directory buckets - MD5 is not supported by directory buckets. You can use checksum algorithms to check object integrity. - Encryption
General purpose bucket - Server-side encryption is for data encryption at rest. Amazon S3 encrypts your data as it writes it to disks in its data centers and decrypts it when you access it. You have mutually exclusive options to protect data using server-side encryption in Amazon S3, depending on how you choose to manage the encryption keys. Specifically, the encryption key options are Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3), Amazon Web Services KMS keys (SSE-KMS), and Customer-Provided Keys (SSE-C). Amazon S3 encrypts data with server-side encryption using Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) by default. You can optionally tell Amazon S3 to encrypt data at rest using server-side encryption with other key options. The option you use depends on whether you want to use KMS keys (SSE-KMS) or provide your own encryption key (SSE-C).
Server-side encryption is supported by the S3 Multipart Upload operations. Unless you are using a customer-provided encryption key (SSE-C), you don't need to specify the encryption parameters in each UploadPart request. Instead, you only need to specify the server-side encryption parameters in the initial Initiate Multipart request. For more information, see CreateMultipartUpload.
If you request server-side encryption using a customer-provided encryption key (SSE-C) in your initiate multipart upload request, you must provide identical encryption information in each part upload using the following request headers.
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-algorithm
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key
x-amz-server-side-encryption-customer-key-MD5
For more information, see Using Server-Side Encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory buckets - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) (
AES256
) and server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS) (aws:kms
).
- Special errors
Error Code:
NoSuchUpload
Description: The specified multipart upload does not exist. The upload ID might be invalid, or the multipart upload might have been aborted or completed.
HTTP Status Code: 404 Not Found
SOAP Fault Code Prefix: Client
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to UploadPart
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 18865 def upload_part(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:upload_part, params) req.send_request() end |
#upload_part_copy(params = {}) ⇒ Types::UploadPartCopyOutput
Uploads a part by copying data from an existing object as data source.
To specify the data source, you add the request header
x-amz-copy-source
in your request. To specify a byte range, you add
the request header x-amz-copy-source-range
in your request.
For information about maximum and minimum part sizes and other multipart upload specifications, see Multipart upload limits in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
You must initiate a multipart upload before you can upload any part. In response to your initiate request, Amazon S3 returns the upload ID, a unique identifier that you must include in your upload part request.
For conceptual information about multipart uploads, see Uploading Objects Using Multipart Upload in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For information about copying objects using a single atomic action vs. a multipart upload, see Operations on Objects in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
https://bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com/key-name
.
Path-style requests are not supported. For more information, see
Regional and Zonal endpoints in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Authentication and authorization
All
UploadPartCopy
requests must be authenticated and signed by using IAM credentials (access key ID and secret access key for the IAM identities). All headers with thex-amz-
prefix, includingx-amz-copy-source
, must be signed. For more information, see REST Authentication.Directory buckets - You must use IAM credentials to authenticate and authorize your access to the
UploadPartCopy
API operation, instead of using the temporary security credentials through theCreateSession
API operation.Amazon Web Services CLI or SDKs handles authentication and authorization on your behalf.
- Permissions
You must have
READ
access to the source object andWRITE
access to the destination bucket.General purpose bucket permissions - You must have the permissions in a policy based on the bucket types of your source bucket and destination bucket in an
UploadPartCopy
operation.If the source object is in a general purpose bucket, you must have the
s3:GetObject
permission to read the source object that is being copied.If the destination bucket is a general purpose bucket, you must have the
s3:PutObject
permission to write the object copy to the destination bucket.To perform a multipart upload with encryption using an Key Management Service key, the requester must have permission to the
kms:Decrypt
andkms:GenerateDataKey
actions on the key. The requester must also have permissions for thekms:GenerateDataKey
action for theCreateMultipartUpload
API. Then, the requester needs permissions for thekms:Decrypt
action on theUploadPart
andUploadPartCopy
APIs. These permissions are required because Amazon S3 must decrypt and read data from the encrypted file parts before it completes the multipart upload. For more information about KMS permissions, see Protecting data using server-side encryption with KMS in the Amazon S3 User Guide. For information about the permissions required to use the multipart upload API, see Multipart upload and permissions and Multipart upload API and permissions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
Directory bucket permissions - You must have permissions in a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy based on the source and destination bucket types in an
UploadPartCopy
operation.If the source object that you want to copy is in a directory bucket, you must have the
s3express:CreateSession
permission in theAction
element of a policy to read the object. By default, the session is in theReadWrite
mode. If you want to restrict the access, you can explicitly set thes3express:SessionMode
condition key toReadOnly
on the copy source bucket.If the copy destination is a directory bucket, you must have the
s3express:CreateSession
permission in theAction
element of a policy to write the object to the destination. Thes3express:SessionMode
condition key cannot be set toReadOnly
on the copy destination.
If the object is encrypted with SSE-KMS, you must also have the
kms:GenerateDataKey
andkms:Decrypt
permissions in IAM identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key.For example policies, see Example bucket policies for S3 Express One Zone and Amazon Web Services Identity and Access Management (IAM) identity-based policies for S3 Express One Zone in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
- Encryption
General purpose buckets - For information about using server-side encryption with customer-provided encryption keys with the
UploadPartCopy
operation, see CopyObject and UploadPart.Directory buckets - For directory buckets, there are only two supported options for server-side encryption: server-side encryption with Amazon S3 managed keys (SSE-S3) (
AES256
) and server-side encryption with KMS keys (SSE-KMS) (aws:kms
). For more information, see Protecting data with server-side encryption in the Amazon S3 User Guide.For directory buckets, when you perform a CreateMultipartUpload
operation and anUploadPartCopy
operation, the request headers you provide in theCreateMultipartUpload
request must match the default encryption configuration of the destination bucket.S3 Bucket Keys aren't supported, when you copy SSE-KMS encrypted objects from general purpose buckets to directory buckets, from directory buckets to general purpose buckets, or between directory buckets, through UploadPartCopy. In this case, Amazon S3 makes a call to KMS every time a copy request is made for a KMS-encrypted object.
- Special errors
Error Code:
NoSuchUpload
Description: The specified multipart upload does not exist. The upload ID might be invalid, or the multipart upload might have been aborted or completed.
HTTP Status Code: 404 Not Found
Error Code:
InvalidRequest
Description: The specified copy source is not supported as a byte-range copy source.
HTTP Status Code: 400 Bad Request
- HTTP Host header syntax
Directory buckets - The HTTP Host header syntax is
Bucket_name.s3express-az_id.region.amazonaws.com
.
The following operations are related to UploadPartCopy
:
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 19434 def upload_part_copy(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:upload_part_copy, params) req.send_request() end |
#wait_until(waiter_name, params = {}, options = {}) {|w.waiter| ... } ⇒ Boolean
Polls an API operation until a resource enters a desired state.
Basic Usage
A waiter will call an API operation until:
- It is successful
- It enters a terminal state
- It makes the maximum number of attempts
In between attempts, the waiter will sleep.
# polls in a loop, sleeping between attempts
client.wait_until(waiter_name, params)
Configuration
You can configure the maximum number of polling attempts, and the delay (in seconds) between each polling attempt. You can pass configuration as the final arguments hash.
# poll for ~25 seconds
client.wait_until(waiter_name, params, {
max_attempts: 5,
delay: 5,
})
Callbacks
You can be notified before each polling attempt and before each
delay. If you throw :success
or :failure
from these callbacks,
it will terminate the waiter.
started_at = Time.now
client.wait_until(waiter_name, params, {
# disable max attempts
max_attempts: nil,
# poll for 1 hour, instead of a number of attempts
before_wait: -> (attempts, response) do
throw :failure if Time.now - started_at > 3600
end
})
Handling Errors
When a waiter is unsuccessful, it will raise an error. All of the failure errors extend from Waiters::Errors::WaiterFailed.
begin
client.wait_until(...)
rescue Aws::Waiters::Errors::WaiterFailed
# resource did not enter the desired state in time
end
Valid Waiters
The following table lists the valid waiter names, the operations they call,
and the default :delay
and :max_attempts
values.
waiter_name | params | :delay | :max_attempts |
---|---|---|---|
bucket_exists | #head_bucket | 5 | 20 |
bucket_not_exists | #head_bucket | 5 | 20 |
object_exists | #head_object | 5 | 20 |
object_not_exists | #head_object | 5 | 20 |
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 19943 def wait_until(waiter_name, params = {}, = {}) w = waiter(waiter_name, ) yield(w.waiter) if block_given? # deprecated w.wait(params) end |
#write_get_object_response(params = {}) ⇒ Struct
Passes transformed objects to a GetObject
operation when using
Object Lambda access points. For information about Object Lambda
access points, see Transforming objects with Object Lambda access
points in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
This operation supports metadata that can be returned by
GetObject, in addition to RequestRoute
, RequestToken
,
StatusCode
, ErrorCode
, and ErrorMessage
. The GetObject
response metadata is supported so that the WriteGetObjectResponse
caller, typically an Lambda function, can provide the same metadata
when it internally invokes GetObject
. When WriteGetObjectResponse
is called by a customer-owned Lambda function, the metadata returned
to the end user GetObject
call might differ from what Amazon S3
would normally return.
You can include any number of metadata headers. When including a
metadata header, it should be prefaced with x-amz-meta
. For example,
x-amz-meta-my-custom-header: MyCustomValue
. The primary use case for
this is to forward GetObject
metadata.
Amazon Web Services provides some prebuilt Lambda functions that you can use with S3 Object Lambda to detect and redact personally identifiable information (PII) and decompress S3 objects. These Lambda functions are available in the Amazon Web Services Serverless Application Repository, and can be selected through the Amazon Web Services Management Console when you create your Object Lambda access point.
Example 1: PII Access Control - This Lambda function uses Amazon Comprehend, a natural language processing (NLP) service using machine learning to find insights and relationships in text. It automatically detects personally identifiable information (PII) such as names, addresses, dates, credit card numbers, and social security numbers from documents in your Amazon S3 bucket.
Example 2: PII Redaction - This Lambda function uses Amazon Comprehend, a natural language processing (NLP) service using machine learning to find insights and relationships in text. It automatically redacts personally identifiable information (PII) such as names, addresses, dates, credit card numbers, and social security numbers from documents in your Amazon S3 bucket.
Example 3: Decompression - The Lambda function S3ObjectLambdaDecompression, is equipped to decompress objects stored in S3 in one of six compressed file formats including bzip2, gzip, snappy, zlib, zstandard and ZIP.
For information on how to view and use these functions, see Using Amazon Web Services built Lambda functions in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-s3/lib/aws-sdk-s3/client.rb', line 19825 def write_get_object_response(params = {}, = {}) req = build_request(:write_get_object_response, params) req.send_request() end |