npm install knoxNode Amazon S3 Client.
- Familiar API (client.get(), client.put(), etc.)
- Very Node-like low-level request capabilities via http.Client
- Higher-level API with client.putStream(), client.getFile(), etc.
- Copying and multi-file delete support
- Streaming file upload and direct stream-piping support
The following examples demonstrate some capabilities of knox and the S3 REST
API. First things first, create an S3 client:
``js`
var client = knox.createClient({
key: '
, secret: '
, bucket: 'learnboost'
});
More options are documented below for features like other endpoints or regions.
If you want to directly upload some strings to S3, you can use the Client#puthttp.Client
method with a string or buffer, just like you would for any 'response'
request. You pass in the filename as the first parameter, some headers for the
second, and then listen for a event on the request. Then send thereq.end()
request using . If we get a 200 response, great!
> If you send a string, set Content-Length to the length of the buffer of your string, rather than of the string itself.
`js`
var object = { foo: "bar" };
var string = JSON.stringify(object);
var req = client.put('/test/obj.json', {
'Content-Length': Buffer.byteLength(string)
, 'Content-Type': 'application/json'
});
req.on('response', function(res){
if (200 == res.statusCode) {
console.log('saved to %s', req.url);
}
});
req.end(string);
By default the _x-amz-acl_ header is _private_. To alter this simply pass this
header to the client request method.
`js`
client.put('/test/obj.json', { 'x-amz-acl': 'public-read' });
Each HTTP verb has an alternate method with the "File" suffix, for example
put() also has a higher level method named putFile(), accepting a source
filename and performing the dirty work shown above for you. Here is an example
usage:
`jsres
client.putFile('my.json', '/user.json', function(err, res){
// Always either do something with or at least call res.resume().`
});
Another alternative is to stream via Client#putStream(), for example:
`jserr
http.get('http://google.com/doodle.png', function(res){
var headers = {
'Content-Length': res.headers['content-length']
, 'Content-Type': res.headers['content-type']
};
client.putStream(res, '/doodle.png', headers, function(err, res){
// check , then do res.pipe(..) or res.resume() or whatever.`
});
});
You can also use your stream's pipe method to pipe to the PUT request, but'Content-Length'
you'll still have to set the header. For example:
`jserr
fs.stat('./Readme.md', function(err, stat){
// Be sure to handle .
var req = client.put('/Readme.md', {
'Content-Length': stat.size
, 'Content-Type': 'text/plain'
});
fs.createReadStream('./Readme.md').pipe(req);
req.on('response', function(res){
// ...
});
});
`
Finally, if you want a nice interface for putting a buffer or a string of data,
use Client#putBuffer():
`js`
var buffer = new Buffer('a string of data');
var headers = {
'Content-Type': 'text/plain'
};
client.putBuffer(buffer, '/string.txt', headers, function(err, res){
// ...
});
Note that both putFile and putStream will stream to S3 instead of reading'progress'
into memory, which is great. And they return objects that emit written
events too, so you can monitor how the streaming goes! The progress events have
fields , total, and percent.
Below is an example __GET__ request on the file we just shoved at S3. It simply
outputs the response status code, headers, and body.
`js`
client.get('/test/Readme.md').on('response', function(res){
console.log(res.statusCode);
console.log(res.headers);
res.setEncoding('utf8');
res.on('data', function(chunk){
console.log(chunk);
});
}).end();
There is also Client#getFile() which uses a callback pattern instead of giving
you the raw request:
`jserr
client.getFile('/test/Readme.md', function(err, res){
// check , then do res.pipe(..) or res.resume() or whatever.`
});
Delete our file:
`js`
client.del('/test/Readme.md').on('response', function(res){
console.log(res.statusCode);
console.log(res.headers);
}).end();
Likewise we also have Client#deleteFile() as a more concise (yet less
flexible) solution:
`jserr
client.deleteFile('/test/Readme.md', function(err, res){
// check , then do res.pipe(..) or res.resume() or whatever.`
});
As you might expect we have Client#head and Client#headFile, following the
same pattern as above.
Knox supports a few advanced operations. Like [copying files][copy]:
`js
client.copy('/test/source.txt', '/test/dest.txt').on('response', function(res){
console.log(res.statusCode);
console.log(res.headers);
}).end();
// or
client.copyFile('/source.txt', '/dest.txt', function(err, res){
// ...
});
`
even between buckets:
`js`
client.copyTo('/source.txt', 'dest-bucket', '/dest.txt').on('response', function(res){
// ...
}).end();
and even between buckets in different regions:
`js`
var destOptions = { region: 'us-west-2', bucket: 'dest-bucket' };
client.copyTo('/source.txt', destOptions, '/dest.txt', function(res){
// ...
}).end();
or [deleting multiple files at once][multi-delete]:
`js`
client.deleteMultiple(['/test/Readme.md', '/test/Readme.markdown'], function(err, res){
// ...
});
or [listing all the files in your bucket][list]:
`jsdata
client.list({ prefix: 'my-prefix' }, function(err, data){
/* will look roughly like:
{
Prefix: 'my-prefix',
IsTruncated: true,
MaxKeys: 1000,
Contents: [
{
Key: 'whatever'
LastModified: new Date(2012, 11, 25, 0, 0, 0),
ETag: 'whatever',
Size: 123,
Owner: 'you',
StorageClass: 'whatever'
},
⋮
]
}
*/
});
`
And you can always issue ad-hoc requests, e.g. the following to
[get an object's ACL][acl]:
`js`
client.request('GET', '/test/Readme.md?acl').on('response', function(res){
// Read and parse the XML response.
// Everyone loves XML parsing.
}).end();
Finally, you can construct HTTP or HTTPS URLs for a file like so:
`js`
var readmeUrl = client.http('/test/Readme.md');
var userDataUrl = client.https('/user.json');
[copy]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectCOPY.html
[multi-delete]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/multiobjectdeleteapi.html
[list]: http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTBucketGET.html
[acl]: http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectGETacl.html
Besides the required key, secret, and bucket options, you can supply any
of the following:
By default knox will send all requests to the global endpoint
(s3.amazonaws.com). This works regardless of the region where the bucket
is. But if you want to manually set the endpoint, e.g. for performance or
testing reasons, or because you are using a S3-compatible service that isn't
hosted by Amazon, you can do it with the endpoint option.
For your convenience when using buckets not in the US Standard region, you can
specify the region option. When you do so, the endpoint is automatically
assembled.
As of this writing, valid values for the region option are:
* US Standard (default): us-standardus-west-2
* US West (Oregon): us-west-1
* US West (Northern California): eu-west-1
* EU (Ireland): ap-southeast-1
* Asia Pacific (Singapore): ap-northeast-1
* Asia Pacific (Tokyo): sa-east-1
* South America (Sao Paulo):
If new regions are added later, their subdomain names will also work when passed
as the region option. See the [AWS endpoint documentation][endpoint-docs] for
the latest list.
**Convenience APIs such as putFile and putStream currently do not work as
expected with buckets in regions other than US Standard without explicitly
specify the region option.** This will eventually be addressed by resolving
[issue #66][]; however, for performance reasons, it is always best to specify
the region option anyway.
[endpoint-docs]: http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/general/latest/gr/rande.html#s3_region
[issue #66]: https://github.com/LearnBoost/knox/issues/66
By default, knox uses HTTPS to connect to S3 on port 443. You can override
either of these with the secure and port options. Note that if you specify aport
custom option, the default for secure switches to false, although
you can override it manually if you want to run HTTPS against a specific port.
If you are using the [AWS Security Token Service][sts] APIs, you can construct
the client with a token parameter containing the temporary security
credentials token. This simply sets the _x-amz-security-token_ header on every
request made by the client.
[sts]: http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/STS/latest/UsingSTS/Welcome.html
By default, knox tries to use the "virtual hosted style" URLs for accessing S3,
e.g. bucket.s3.amazonaws.com. If you pass in "path" as the style option,bucket
or pass in a value that cannot be used with virtual hosted style URLs,s3.amazonaws.com/bucket
knox will use "path style" URLs, e.g. . There are
tradeoffs you should be aware of:
- Virtual hosted style URLs can work with any region, without requiring it to be
explicitly specified; path style URLs cannot.
- You can access programmatically-created buckets only by using virtual hosted
style URLs; path style URLs will not work.
- You can access buckets with periods in their names over SSL using path style
URLs; virtual host style URLs will not work unless you turn off certificate
validation.
- You can access buckets with mixed-case names only using path style URLs;
virtual host style URLs will not work.
For more information on the differences between these two types of URLs, and
limitations related to them, see the following S3 documentation pages:
- [Virtual Hosting of Buckets][virtual]
- [Bucket Configuration Options][config]
- [Bucket Restrictions and Limitations][limits]
[virtual]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/VirtualHosting.html
[config]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/BucketConfiguration.html
[limits]: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/BucketRestrictions.html
Knox disables the default [HTTP agent][], because it leads to lots of "socket
hang up" errors when doing more than 5 requests at once. See [#116][] for
details. If you want to get the default agent back, you can specify
agent: require("https").globalAgent, or use your own.
[#116]: https://github.com/LearnBoost/knox/issues/116#issuecomment-15045187
[HTTP agent]: http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/http.html#http_class_http_agent
S3's [multipart upload][] is their [rather-complicated][] way of uploading large
files. In particular, it is the only way of streaming files without knowing
their Content-Length ahead of time.
Adding the complexity of multipart upload directly to knox is not a great idea.
For example, it requires buffering at least 5 MiB of data at a time in memory,
which you want to avoid if possible. Fortunately, [@nathanoehlman][] has created
the excellent [knox-mpu][] package to let you use multipart upload with knox if
you need it!
[multipart upload]: http://aws.typepad.com/aws/2010/11/amazon-s3-multipart-upload.html
[rather-complicated]: http://stackoverflow.com/q/8653146/3191
[@nathanoehlman]: https://github.com/nathanoehlman
[knox-mpu]: https://npmjs.org/package/knox-mpu
[@superjoe30][] has created a nice library, called simply [s3][], that makes it
very easy to upload local files directly to S3, and download them back to your
filesystem. For simple cases this is often exactly what you want!
[@superjoe30]: https://github.com/superjoe30
[s3]: https://npmjs.org/package/s3
[@jergason][] created [intimidate][], a library wrapping Knox to automatically retry
failed uploads with exponential backoff. This helps your app deal with intermittent
connectivity to S3 without bringing it to a ginding halt.
[@jergason]: https://github.com/jergason
[intimidate]: https://npmjs.org/package/intimidate
[@goodeggs][] created [knox-copy][] to easily copy and stream keys of buckets beyond Amazon's 1000 key page size limit.
[@goodeggs]: https://github.com/goodeggs
[knox-copy]: https://npmjs.org/package/knox-copy
[@segmentio][] created [s3-lister][] to stream a list of bucket keys using the new streams2 interface.
[@segmentio]: https://github.com/segmentio
[s3-lister]: https://npmjs.org/package/s3-lister
[@drob][] created [s3-deleter][], a writable stream that batch-deletes bucket keys.
[@drob]: https://github.com/drob
[s3-deleter]: https://npmjs.org/package/s3-deleter
To run the test suite you must first have an S3 account. Then create a file named
_./test/auth.json_, which contains your credentials as JSON, for example:
`json`
{
"key": "
"secret": "
"bucket": "
"bucket2": "
"bucketUsWest2": "
}
Then install the dev dependencies and execute the test suite:
```
$ npm install
$ npm test