Amazon::S3::Thin - A thin, lightweight, low-level Amazon S3 client
use Amazon::S3::Thin; my $s3client = Amazon::S3::Thin->new({ aws_access_key_id => $aws_access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key => $aws_secret_access_key, region => $region, # e.g. 'ap-northeast-1' }); my $bucket = "mybucket"; my $key = "dir/file.txt"; my $response; $response = $s3client->put_bucket($bucket); $response = $s3client->put_object($bucket, $key, "hello world"); $response = $s3client->get_object($bucket, $key); print $response->content; # => "hello world" $response = $s3client->delete_object($bucket, $key); $response = $s3client->list_objects( $bucket, {prefix => "foo", delimiter => "/"} );
You can also pass any useragent as you like
my $s3client = Amazon::S3::Thin->new({ ... ua => $any_LWP_copmatible_useragent, });
Signature version 4 is used by default. To use signature version 2, add a signature_version option:
signature_version
my $s3client = Amazon::S3::Thin->new({ ... signature_version => 2, });
Amazon::S3::Thin is a thin, lightweight, low-level Amazon S3 client.
It's designed for only ONE purpose: Send a request and get a response.
In detail, it offers the following features:
It returns an HTTP::Response object so you can easily inspect what's happening inside, and can handle errors as you like.
It does not require any XML::* modules, so installation is easy;
The interfaces are designed to follow S3 official REST APIs. So it is easy to learn.
There are already some useful modules like Amazon::S3, Net::Amazon::S3 on CPAN. They provide a "Perlish" interface, which looks pretty for Perl programmers, but they also hide low-level behaviors. For example, the "get_key" method translate HTTP status 404 into undef and HTTP 5xx status into exception.
undef
In some situations, it is very important to see the raw HTTP communications. That's why I made this module.
Receives: hashref with options.
Returns: Amazon::S3::Thin object
It can receive the following arguments:
aws_access_key_id (REQUIRED) - an access key id of your credentials.
aws_access_key_id
aws_secret_access_key (REQUIRED) - an secret access key of your credentials.
aws_secret_access_key
region - (REQUIRED) region of your buckets you access- (currently used only when signature version is 4)
region
secure - whether to use https or not. Default is 0 (http).
secure
ua - a user agent object, compatible with LWP::UserAgent. Default is an instance of LWP::UserAgent.
ua
signature_version - AWS signature version to use. Supported values are 2 and 4. Default is 4.
debug - debug option. Default is 0 (false). If set 1, contents of HTTP request and response are shown on stderr
debug
The following accessors are provided. You can use them to get/set your object's attributes.
Whether to use https (1) or http (0) when connecting to S3.
The user agent used internally to perform requests and return responses. If you set this attribute, please make sure you do so with an object compatible with LWP::UserAgent (i.e. providing the same interface).
Debug option.
Arguments:
Returns: an HTTP::Response object for the request. Use the content() method on the returned object to read the contents:
content()
my $res = $s3->get_object( 'my.bucket', 'my/key.ext' ); if ($res->is_success) { my $content = $res->content; }
The GET operation retrieves an object from Amazon S3.
For more information, please refer to Amazon's documentation for GET.
Arguments: a string with the bucket name, and a string with the key name.
Returns: an HTTP::Response object for the request.
The DELETE operation removes the null version (if there is one) of an object and inserts a delete marker, which becomes the current version of the object. If there isn't a null version, Amazon S3 does not remove any objects.
Use the response object to see if it succeeded or not.
For more information, please refer to Amazon's documentation for DELETE.
Arguments: a list with source (bucket, key) and destination (bucket, key)
This method is a variation of the PUT operation as described by Amazon's S3 API. It creates a copy of an object that is already stored in Amazon S3. This "PUT copy" operation is the same as performing a GET from the old bucket/key and then a PUT to the new bucket/key.
For more information, please refer to Amazon's documentation for COPY.
The PUT operation adds an object to a bucket. Amazon S3 never adds partial objects; if you receive a success response, Amazon S3 added the entire object to the bucket.
For more information, please refer to Amazon's documentation for PUT.
Arguments: a string with the bucket name, and an array with all the keys to be deleted.
The Multi-Object Delete operation enables you to delete multiple objects (up to 1000) 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 with delete_object(), reducing per-request overhead.
delete_object()
For more information, please refer to Amazon's documentation for DELETE multiple objects.
Arguments: a string with the bucket name, and (optionally) a hashref with any of the following options:
prefix (string) - only return keys that begin with the specified prefix. You can use prefixes to separate a bucket into different groupings of keys, the same way you'd use a folder in a file system.
prefix
delimiter (string) - group keys that contain the same string between the beginning of the key (or after the prefix, if specified) and the first occurrence of the delimiter.
delimiter
encoding-type (string) - if set to "url", will encode keys in the response (useful when the XML parser can't work unicode keys).
encoding-type
marker (string) - specifies the key to start with when listing objects. Amazon S3 returns object keys in alphabetical order, starting with the key right after the marker, in order.
marker
max-keys (string) - Sets the maximum number of keys returned in the response body. You can add this to your request if you want to retrieve fewer than the default 1000 keys.
max-keys
This method returns some or all (up to 1000) of the objects in a bucket. Note that the response might contain fewer keys but will never contain more. If there are additional keys that satisfy the search criteria but were not returned because the limit (either 1000 or max-keys) was exceeded, the response will contain <IsTruncated>true</IsTruncated>. To return the additional keys, see marker above.
<IsTruncated>true</IsTruncated>
For more information, please refer to Amazon's documentation for REST Bucket GET.
https://github.com/DQNEO/Amazon-S3-Thin
Copyright (C) DQNEO.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
DQNEO
Timothy Appnel Breno G. de Oliveira
Amazon::S3, https://github.com/tima/perl-amazon-s3
Net::Amazon::S3
Amazon S3 API Reference : REST API
Amazon S3 API Reference : List of Error Codes
To install Amazon::S3::Thin, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Amazon::S3::Thin
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Amazon::S3::Thin
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.