Skip to main content

CDK Constructs for S3 Tables

Project description

Amazon S3 Tables Construct Library

---

cdk-constructs: Experimental

The APIs of higher level constructs in this module are experimental and under active development. They are subject to non-backward compatible changes or removal in any future version. These are not subject to the Semantic Versioning model and breaking changes will be announced in the release notes. This means that while you may use them, you may need to update your source code when upgrading to a newer version of this package.


Amazon S3 Tables

Amazon S3 Tables deliver the first cloud object store with built-in Apache Iceberg support and streamline storing tabular data at scale.

Product Page | User Guide

Usage

Define an S3 Table Bucket

from aws_cdk.aws_s3tables_alpha import UnreferencedFileRemoval
# Build a Table bucket
sample_table_bucket = TableBucket(scope, "ExampleTableBucket",
    table_bucket_name="example-bucket-1",
    # optional fields:
    unreferenced_file_removal=UnreferencedFileRemoval(
        status=UnreferencedFileRemovalStatus.ENABLED,
        noncurrent_days=20,
        unreferenced_days=20
    )
)

Define an S3 Tables Namespace

# Build a namespace
sample_namespace = Namespace(scope, "ExampleNamespace",
    namespace_name="example-namespace-1",
    table_bucket=table_bucket
)

Define an S3 Table

from aws_cdk.aws_s3tables_alpha import IcebergMetadataProperty, IcebergSchemaProperty, SchemaFieldProperty, SchemaFieldProperty, CompactionProperty, SnapshotManagementProperty
# Build a table
sample_table = Table(scope, "ExampleTable",
    table_name="example_table",
    namespace=namespace,
    open_table_format=OpenTableFormat.ICEBERG,
    without_metadata=True
)

# Build a table with an Iceberg Schema
sample_table_with_schema = Table(scope, "ExampleSchemaTable",
    table_name="example_table_with_schema",
    namespace=namespace,
    open_table_format=OpenTableFormat.ICEBERG,
    iceberg_metadata=IcebergMetadataProperty(
        iceberg_schema=IcebergSchemaProperty(
            schema_field_list=[SchemaFieldProperty(
                name="id",
                type="int",
                required=True
            ), SchemaFieldProperty(
                name="name",
                type="string"
            )
            ]
        )
    ),
    compaction=CompactionProperty(
        status=Status.ENABLED,
        target_file_size_mb=128
    ),
    snapshot_management=SnapshotManagementProperty(
        status=Status.ENABLED,
        max_snapshot_age_hours=48,
        min_snapshots_to_keep=5
    )
)

Learn more about table buckets maintenance operations and default behavior from the S3 Tables User Guide

Controlling Table Bucket Permissions

# Grant the principal read permissions to the bucket and all tables within
account_id = "123456789012"
table_bucket.grant_read(iam.AccountPrincipal(account_id), "*")

# Grant the role write permissions to the bucket and all tables within
role = iam.Role(stack, "MyRole", assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("sample"))
table_bucket.grant_write(role, "*")

# Grant the user read and write permissions to the bucket and all tables within
table_bucket.grant_read_write(iam.User(stack, "MyUser"), "*")

# Grant permissions to the bucket and a particular table within it
table_id = "6ba046b2-26de-44cf-9144-0c7862593a7b"
table_bucket.grant_read_write(iam.AccountPrincipal(account_id), table_id)

# Add custom resource policy statements
permissions = iam.PolicyStatement(
    effect=iam.Effect.ALLOW,
    actions=["s3tables:*"],
    principals=[iam.ServicePrincipal("example.aws.internal")],
    resources=["*"]
)

table_bucket.add_to_resource_policy(permissions)

Controlling Table Bucket Encryption Settings

S3 TableBuckets have SSE (server-side encryption with AES-256) enabled by default with S3 managed keys. You can also bring your own KMS key for KMS-SSE or have S3 create a KMS key for you.

If a bucket is encrypted with KMS, grant functions on the bucket will also grant access to the TableBucket's associated KMS key.

# Provide a user defined KMS Key:
key = kms.Key(scope, "UserKey")
encrypted_bucket = TableBucket(scope, "EncryptedTableBucket",
    table_bucket_name="table-bucket-1",
    encryption=TableBucketEncryption.KMS,
    encryption_key=key
)
# This account principal will also receive kms:Decrypt access to the KMS key
encrypted_bucket.grant_read(iam.AccountPrincipal("123456789012"), "*")

# Use S3 managed server side encryption (default)
encrypted_bucket_default = TableBucket(scope, "EncryptedTableBucketDefault",
    table_bucket_name="table-bucket-3",
    encryption=TableBucketEncryption.S3_MANAGED
)

When using KMS encryption (TableBucketEncryption.KMS), if no encryption key is provided, CDK will automatically create a new KMS key for the table bucket with necessary permissions.

# If no key is provided, one will be created automatically
encrypted_bucket_auto = TableBucket(scope, "EncryptedTableBucketAuto",
    table_bucket_name="table-bucket-2",
    encryption=TableBucketEncryption.KMS
)

Controlling Table Permissions

# Grant the principal read permissions to the table
account_id = "123456789012"
table.grant_read(iam.AccountPrincipal(account_id))

# Grant the role write permissions to the table
role = iam.Role(stack, "MyRole", assumed_by=iam.ServicePrincipal("sample"))
table.grant_write(role)

# Grant the user read and write permissions to the table
table.grant_read_write(iam.User(stack, "MyUser"))

# Grant an account permissions to the table
table.grant_read_write(iam.AccountPrincipal(account_id))

# Add custom resource policy statements
permissions = iam.PolicyStatement(
    effect=iam.Effect.ALLOW,
    actions=["s3tables:*"],
    principals=[iam.ServicePrincipal("example.aws.internal")],
    resources=["*"]
)

table.add_to_resource_policy(permissions)

Coming Soon

L2 Construct support for:

  • KMS encryption support for Tables

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

aws_cdk_aws_s3tables_alpha-2.236.0a0.tar.gz (128.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

aws_cdk_aws_s3tables_alpha-2.236.0a0-py3-none-any.whl (128.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file aws_cdk_aws_s3tables_alpha-2.236.0a0.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for aws_cdk_aws_s3tables_alpha-2.236.0a0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2d386c724ccc270f984d5103d0cb01ed60f968e0b03fe74b960d6cd3dcd733a2
MD5 ff21bbf81a909d71f191d53a6bcea0c6
BLAKE2b-256 57a28d0c70edc18fe0051d0be11939be8b2dbb956866ffe6caec67a54fdd4757

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file aws_cdk_aws_s3tables_alpha-2.236.0a0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for aws_cdk_aws_s3tables_alpha-2.236.0a0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e4faf5d3c65085ad06c49f89d5046f996c5c478866436ba654dcc77bb2c3f53a
MD5 dc578e1f14022de58e18d753cdb1a64c
BLAKE2b-256 78900e8fb04e781453dc0cc50fadf57900f1eee2211e76d938866e7bcd2fd447

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page