Perl S3 Examples¶
Creating a Connection¶
This creates a connection so that you can interact with the server.
use Amazon::S3;
my $access_key = 'put your access key here!';
my $secret_key = 'put your secret key here!';
my $conn = Amazon::S3->new({
aws_access_key_id => $access_key,
aws_secret_access_key => $secret_key,
host => 'objects.dreamhost.com',
secure => 1,
retry => 1,
});
Listing Owned Buckets¶
This gets a list of Amazon::S3::Bucket objects that you own. We’ll also print out the bucket name and creation date of each bucket.
my @buckets = @{$conn->buckets->{buckets} || []};
foreach my $bucket (@buckets) {
print $bucket->bucket . "\t" . $bucket->creation_date . "\n";
}
The output will look something like this:
mahbuckat1 2011-04-21T18:05:39.000Z
mahbuckat2 2011-04-21T18:05:48.000Z
mahbuckat3 2011-04-21T18:07:18.000Z
Creating a Bucket¶
This creates a new bucket called my-new-bucket
my $bucket = $conn->add_bucket({ bucket => 'my-new-bucket' });
Listing a Bucket’s Content¶
This gets a list of hashes with info about each object in the bucket. We’ll also print out each object’s name, the file size, and last modified date.
my @keys = @{$bucket->list_all->{keys} || []};
foreach my $key (@keys) {
print "$key->{key}\t$key->{size}\t$key->{last_modified}\n";
}
The output will look something like this:
myphoto1.jpg 251262 2011-08-08T21:35:48.000Z
myphoto2.jpg 262518 2011-08-08T21:38:01.000Z
Deleting a Bucket¶
Note
The Bucket must be empty! Otherwise it won’t work!
$conn->delete_bucket($bucket);
Forced Delete for Non-empty Buckets¶
Attention
not available in the Amazon::S3 perl module
Creating an Object¶
This creates a file hello.txt
with the string "Hello World!"
$bucket->add_key(
'hello.txt', 'Hello World!',
{ content_type => 'text/plain' },
);
Change an Object’s ACL¶
This makes the object hello.txt
to be publicly readable and
secret_plans.txt
to be private.
$bucket->set_acl({
key => 'hello.txt',
acl_short => 'public-read',
});
$bucket->set_acl({
key => 'secret_plans.txt',
acl_short => 'private',
});
Download an Object (to a file)¶
This downloads the object perl_poetry.pdf
and saves it in
/home/larry/documents/
$bucket->get_key_filename('perl_poetry.pdf', undef,
'/home/larry/documents/perl_poetry.pdf');
Generate Object Download URLs (signed and unsigned)¶
This generates an unsigned download URL for hello.txt
. This works
because we made hello.txt
public by setting the ACL above.
Then this generates a signed download URL for secret_plans.txt
that
will work for 1 hour. Signed download URLs will work for the time
period even if the object is private (when the time period is up, the
URL will stop working).
Note
The Amazon::S3 module does not have a way to generate download
URLs, so we’re going to be using another module instead. Unfortunately,
most modules for generating these URLs assume that you are using Amazon,
so we’ve had to go with using a more obscure module, Muck::FS::S3. This
should be the same as Amazon’s sample S3 perl module, but this sample
module is not in CPAN. So, you can either use CPAN to install
Muck::FS::S3, or install Amazon’s sample S3 module manually. If you go
the manual route, you can remove Muck::FS::
from the example below.
use Muck::FS::S3::QueryStringAuthGenerator;
my $generator = Muck::FS::S3::QueryStringAuthGenerator->new(
$access_key,
$secret_key,
0, # 0 means use 'http'. set this to 1 for 'https'
'objects.dreamhost.com',
);
my $hello_url = $generator->make_bare_url($bucket->bucket, 'hello.txt');
print $hello_url . "\n";
$generator->expires_in(3600); # 1 hour = 3600 seconds
my $plans_url = $generator->get($bucket->bucket, 'secret_plans.txt');
print $plans_url . "\n";
The output will look something like this:
http://objects.dreamhost.com:80/my-bucket-name/hello.txt
http://objects.dreamhost.com:80/my-bucket-name/secret_plans.txt?Signature=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX&Expires=1316027075&AWSAccessKeyId=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX