Some command lines utilities to interact with files stored in AWS S3 incl. versioned ones.
Project description
If you use AWS S3, then this can be handy tool for you.
This package offers few command line utilities like:
List versions in defined time period, see versioning
Fetch versions specified in CSV file (list-file)
Generate temporary url links for set of keys in buckets
Installation
$ pip install ttr.aws.utils.s3
Other methods (easy_install, setup.py) work too.
Quick start
We want to fetch versions of feed in bucket mybucket named my/versioned/feed.xml
Be sure, you have your AWS CLI credentials are properly configured. See AWS_config.
create csv file for given feed and time period:
$ s3lsvers -from 2012-05-24T00:15 -to 2012-05-24T01:15 -list-file list.csv mybucket my/versioned/feed.xml
You shall then find file list.csv on your disk.
Review records in list.csv and delete all lines with version, which are not of your interest.
Using list.csv, ask s3getvers to fetch all versions specified in the file. Be sure to run it on empty directory:
$ s3getvers mybucket list.csv
You will see, how is each version downloaded and saved to your current directory.
Finally, you can try generating temorary url to your feed (showing latest of versions):
$ s3tmpgen 2014-09-30T00:00:00Z mybucket my/versioned/feed.xml https://mybucket.s3.amazonaws.com/my/versioned/feed.xml?Signature=kOCwz%2FkanVWX8O15dlXhy4jrbwY%3D&Expires=1412031600&AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAxyzxyzxyzEQA
Note, that the url does not include VersionId, so it will always point to the most up todate version (in case the key happens to be on versioned bucket).
Provided commands
s3lsvers
List versions of some feed. Could output into CSV file (-list-file) and/or html chart (-html-file).:
$ s3lsvers -h usage: s3lsvers [-h] [-from None] [-to None] [-list-file None] [-html-file None] [-version-id None] [-profile-name None] [-aws-access-key-id None] [-aws-secret-access-key None] bucket_key Lists all versions of given key, possibly filtering by from - to range for version last_modified time. Allows to put the listing into csv file and or into html chart. Listing shows: key_name "file name". Can repeat if the file has more versions version_id unique identifier for given version on given bucket. Has form of string and not a number. identifiers are "random", do not expect that they are sorten alphabetically. size size of file in bytes last_modified ISO 8601 formated time of file modification, e.g. `2011-06-22T03:05:09.000Z` age difference between last_modified or given version and preceding version. It is sort of current update interval for that version. Sample use: Lists to the screen all versions of file keyname in the bucketname bucket:: $ s3lsvers bucketname/keyname Lists all versions younger then given time (from given time till now):: $ s3lsvers -from 2011-07-19T12:00:00 bucketname/keyname Lists all versions older then given time (from very first version till given date):: $ s3lsvers -to 2011-07-19T12:00:00 bucketname/keyname Lists all versions in period betwen from and to time:: $ s3lsvers -from 2010-01-01 -to 2011-07-19T12:00:00 bucketname/keyname Lists all versions and writes them into csv file named versions.csv:: $ s3lsvers -list-file versions.csv bucketname/keyname Lists all versions and writes them into html chart file named chart.html:: $ s3lsvers -html-file chart.html bucketname/keyname Prints to screen, writes to csv, creates html chart and this all for versions in given time period.:: $ s3lsvers -from 2010-01-01 -to 2011-07-19T12:00:00 -list-file versions.csv -html-file chart.html bucketname/keyname Using bucket/key_name aliases in .s3lsvers file Instead of using long bucket and key names on command line, you may define aliases. Aliases are specified in file .s3lsvers, which may be located in currect directory, home directory or /etc/s3lsvers" Content of .s3lsvers files may look like this:: #.s3lsversrc - definition of some preconfigured bucket/key values [DEFAULT] pl-base: pl-base.dp.tamtamresearch.com cz-base: cz-base.dp.tamtamresearch.com sk-base: sk-base.dp.tamtamresearch.com #values left to ":" must not contain "/" to prevent confusion with real bucket names [aliases] plcsr: %(pl-base)s/region/pl/ConsumerServiceReady.xml pldfs: %(pl-base)s/region/pl/DataFusionService.xml czcsr: %(cz-base)s/region/cz/ConsumerServiceReady.xml czdfs: %(cz-base)s/region/cz/DataFusionService.xml skcsr: %(sk-base)s/region/sk/ConsumerServiceReady.xml skdfs: %(sk-base)s/region/sk/DataFusionService.xml skes: %(sk-base)s/region/sk/EventService.xml sksr: %(sk-base)s/region/sk/SummaryReports.xml The format follows SafeConfigParser rules: http://docs.python.org/2/library/configparser.html#safeconfigparser-objects positional arguments: bucket_key bucket_name/key_name for the key to list, or key alias defined in .s3lsvers file optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -from None, --from-time None Modification time of oldest expected version as ISO 8601 format. Can be truncated. (default: goes to the oldest version) -to None, --to-time None Modification time of youngest expected version as ISO 8601 format. Can be truncated. (default: goes to the latest version) -list-file None Name of file, where is result written in csv format. If set, the file is always overwritten. -html-file None Name of file, where is result written in html format (as a chart). If set, the file is always overwritten. -version-id None Optional version-id. If specified, listing does not start from the freshest version, but starts searching from given VERSION_ID and continues searching older and older versions. This could speed up listng in case, you need rather older files and you know VERSION_ID which came somehow later then is the time scope you are going to list. -profile-name None Name of AWSCLI profile to use for credentials -aws-access-key-id None Your AWS Access Key ID -aws-secret-access-key None Your AWS Secret Access Key
s3getvers
$ s3getvers -h usage: s3getvers [-h] [-output-version-id-names] [-no-decompression] [-profile-name None] [-aws-access-key-id None] [-aws-secret-access-key None] bucket_name csv_version_file Fetch file versions as listed in provided csv file Typical csv file (as by default produced by s3lsvers) is: my/versioned/feed.xml;OrUr6XO8KSKEHbd8mQ.MloGcGlsh7Sir;191345;2012-05-23T20:45:10.000Z;39 my/versioned/feed.xml;xhkVOy.dJfjSfUwse8tsieqjDicp0owq;192790;2012-05-23T20:44:31.000Z;62 my/versioned/feed.xml;oKneK.N2wS8pW8.EmLqjldYlgcFwxN3V;193912;2012-05-23T20:43:29.000Z;58 and has columns: :key_name: name of the feed (not containing the bucket name itself) :version_id: string, identifying unique version. Any following columns can contain anything. :size: size in bytes. This column is not used and can be missing. :last_modified: date, when the version was posted. This column is not used and can be missing. Typical use (assuming, above csv file is available under name verlist.csv):: $ s3getvers yourbucketname verlist.csv What will create following files in current directory: + my/versioned/feed.xml.2012-05-23T20_45_10.xml + my/versioned/feed.xml.2012-05-23T20_44_31.xml + my/versioned/feed.xml.2012-05-23T20_43_29.xml Even though these files are gzipped on server, they will be decompressed on local disk. positional arguments: bucket_name bucket name (default: None) csv_version_file name of CSV file with version_id optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -output-version-id-names Resulting file names shall use version_id to become distinguished (default is to use timestamp of file creation) -no-decompression Keeps the files as they come, do not decompress, if they come compressed -profile-name None Name of AWSCLI profile to use for credentials -aws-access-key-id None Your AWS Access Key ID -aws-secret-access-key None Your AWS Secret Access Key
s3tmpgen
$ s3tmpgen -h usage: s3tmpgen [-h] [-profile-name None] [-aws-access-key-id None] [-aws-secret-access-key None] [-validate-bucket] [-validate-key] [-http] expire_dt bucket_name [key_names [key_names ...]] Generate temporary url for accessing content of AWS S3 key. Temporary url includes expiration time, after which it rejects serving the content. Urls are printed one per line to stdout. For missing key names empty line is printed and error goes to stderr. If the bucket is versioned, tmp url will serve the latest version at the moment of request (version_id is not part of generated url). By default, bucket and key name existnence is not verified. Url is using https, unless `-http` is used. positional arguments: expire_dt ISO formatted time of expiration, full seconds, 'Z' is obligatory, e.g. '2014-02-14T21:47:16Z' bucket_name name of bucket key_names key names to generate tmpurl for optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -profile-name None Name of AWSCLI profile to use for credentials -aws-access-key-id None Your AWS Access Key ID -aws-secret-access-key None Your AWS Secret Access Key -validate-bucket Make sure, the bucket really exists -validate-key Make sure, the key really exists -http Force the url to use http and not https
Configuring AWS S3 credentials
Configure the credentials as you would do for using AWS CLI.
If you configure profiles, you may use switch -profile when calling the commands.
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
Built Distribution
Hashes for ttr.aws.utils.s3-0.5.2-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 035465e8c1dd290365404fea41e1c268fac2317ffc46db98c8e2810ff808c4e6 |
|
MD5 | e11f5352ddfe69f1b9202be34a01fb74 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 04b61773231a522afc85cd29b55fab3b7fa3b4c76a7abae18729c7a08ffde8c9 |