This recipe shows how Ozone object store can be accessed from Boto3 client. Following apis were verified:
You will need a higher version of Python3 for your Boto3 client as Boto3 installation requirement indicates at here: https://boto3.amazonaws.com/v1/documentation/api/latest/index.html
You may reference Amazon Boto3 documentation regarding the creation of ‘s3’ resources at here: https://boto3.amazonaws.com/v1/documentation/api/latest/guide/resources.html
s3 = boto3.resource('s3',
endpoint_url='http://localhost:9878',
aws_access_key_id='testuser/scm@EXAMPLE.COM',
aws_secret_access_key='c261b6ecabf7d37d5f9ded654b1c724adac9bd9f13e247a235e567e8296d2999'
)
'endpoint_url' is pointing to Ozone s3 endpoint.
You may reference Amazon Boto3 documentation regarding session at here: https://boto3.amazonaws.com/v1/documentation/api/latest/reference/core/session.html
Create a session
session = boto3.session.Session()
Obtain s3 client to Ozone via session:
s3_client = session.client(
service_name='s3',
aws_access_key_id='testuser/scm@EXAMPLE.COM',
aws_secret_access_key='c261b6ecabf7d37d5f9ded654b1c724adac9bd9f13e247a235e567e8296d2999',
endpoint_url='http://localhost:9878',
)
'endpoint_url' is pointing to Ozone s3 endpoint.
In our code sample below, we're demonstrating the usage of both s3 and s3_client.
There are multiple ways to configure Boto3 client credentials if you’re connecting to a secured cluster. In these cases, the above lines of passing ‘aws_access_key_id’ and ‘aws_secret_access_key’ when creating Ozone s3 client shall be skipped.
Please refer to Boto3 documentation for details at here: https://boto3.amazonaws.com/v1/documentation/api/latest/guide/credentials.html
response = s3_client.create_bucket(Bucket='bucket1')
print(response)
This will create a bucket ‘bucket1’ in Ozone volume ‘s3v’.
response = s3_client.list_buckets()
print('Existing buckets:')
for bucket in response['Buckets']:
print(f' {bucket["Name"]}')
This will list all buckets in Ozone volume ‘s3v’.
response = s3_client.head_bucket(Bucket='bucket1')
print(response)
This will head bucket ‘bucket1’ in Ozone volume ‘s3v’.
response = s3_client.delete_bucket(Bucket='bucket1')
print(response)
This will delete the bucket ‘bucket1’ from Ozone volume ‘s3v’.
response = s3.Bucket('bucket1').upload_file('./README.md','README.md')
print(response)
This will upload ‘README.md’ to Ozone creates a key ‘README.md’ in volume ‘s3v’.
response = s3.Bucket('bucket1').download_file('README.md', 'download.md')
print(response)
This will download ‘README.md’ from Ozone volume ‘s3v’ to local and create a file with name ‘download.md’.
response = s3_client.head_object(Bucket='bucket1', Key='README.md')
print(response)
This will head object ‘README.md’ from Ozone volume ‘s3v’ in the bucket ‘bucket1’.
response = s3_client.delete_objects(
Bucket='bucket1',
Delete={
'Objects': [
{
'Key': 'README4.md',
},
{
'Key': 'README3.md',
},
],
'Quiet': False,
},
)
This will delete objects ‘README3.md’ and ‘README4.md’ from Ozone volume ‘s3v’ in bucket ‘bucket1’.
response = s3_client.create_multipart_upload(Bucket='bucket1', Key='key1')
print(response)
uid=response['UploadId']
print(uid)
response = s3_client.upload_part_copy(
Bucket='bucket1',
CopySource='/bucket1/maven.gz',
Key='key1',
PartNumber=1,
UploadId=str(uid)
)
print(response)
etag1=response.get('CopyPartResult').get('ETag')
print(etag1)
response = s3_client.upload_part_copy(
Bucket='bucket1',
CopySource='/bucket1/maven1.gz',
Key='key1',
PartNumber=2,
UploadId=str(uid)
)
print(response)
etag2=response.get('CopyPartResult').get('ETag')
print(etag2)
response = s3_client.complete_multipart_upload(
Bucket='bucket1',
Key='key1',
MultipartUpload={
'Parts': [
{
'ETag': str(etag1),
'PartNumber': 1,
},
{
'ETag': str(etag2),
'PartNumber': 2,
},
],
},
UploadId=str(uid),
)
print(response)
This will use ‘maven.gz’ and ‘maven1.gz’ as copy source from Ozone volume ‘s3v’ to create a new object ‘key1’ in Ozone volume ‘s3v’. Please note ‘ETag’s is required and important for the call.
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