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            The  
            A 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.
General purpose bucket permissions - To use HEAD, you must have the
            s3: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 code 404 Not Found error.
            
            If you don’t have the s3:ListBucket permission, Amazon S3 returns an HTTP status
            code 403 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 the s3express:CreateSession permission to the directory bucket in
            a bucket policy or an IAM identity-based policy. Then, you make the CreateSession
            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 another CreateSession 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, see CreateSession.
            
            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 the kms:GenerateDataKey and kms:Decrypt permissions in IAM
            identity-based policies and KMS key policies for the KMS key to retrieve the checksum
            of the object.
            
            Encryption request headers, like x-amz-server-side-encryption, should not be
            sent for HEAD 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). The x-amz-server-side-encryption header is used when
            you PUT an object to S3 and want to specify the encryption method. If you include
            this header in a HEAD request for an object that uses these types of keys,
            you’ll get an HTTP 400 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.
            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 the Last-Modified: timestamp response header.
            
Directory buckets - Delete marker is not supported for 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 specify null to the versionId query
            parameter in the request.
            
Directory buckets  - The HTTP Host header syntax is Bucket-name.s3express-zone-id.region-code.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://amzn-s3-demo-bucket.s3express-zone-id.region-code.amazonaws.com/key-name. Path-style requests are not supported. For more information about endpoints
            in Availability Zones, see Regional
            and Zonal endpoints for directory buckets in Availability Zones in the Amazon
            S3 User Guide. For more information about endpoints in Local Zones, see Concepts
            for directory buckets in Local Zones in the Amazon S3 User Guide.
            
            The following actions are related to HeadObject:
            
            You must URL encode any signed header values that contain spaces. For example, if
            your header value is my file.txt, containing two spaces after my, you
            must URL encode this value to my%20%20file.txt.
            
For .NET Core this operation is only available in asynchronous form. Please refer to GetObjectMetadataAsync.
Namespace: Amazon.S3
Assembly: AWSSDK.S3.dll
Version: 3.x.y.z
public abstract GetObjectMetadataResponse GetObjectMetadata( GetObjectMetadataRequest request )
Container for the necessary parameters to execute the GetObjectMetadata service method.
.NET Framework: 
Supported in: 4.5 and newer, 3.5