Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 6 Next »

The AWS Command Line Interface is a tool that can be used to interact with Amazon Web Services in a command-line shell, but only the S3 commands are relevant to the USS S3 gateway.

The AWS CLI tool is available for Windows, macOS and Linux. The steps below show how the tool can be installed and used on CentOS Linux. Installation and usage instructions for other operating systems can be found here:

Install awscli

[user@localhost ~]$ sudo yum install awscli

Configure awscli

[user@localhost ~]$ aws configure
AWS Access Key ID [None]: <username>
AWS Secret Access Key [None]: <password>
Default region name [None]: [Enter]
Default output format [None]: [Enter]

Run awscli

create a new bucket:

[user@localhost ~]$ aws –endpoint-url <endpoint-url> s3 mb s3://<bucket-name>

list all buckets:

[user@localhost ~]$ aws –endpoint-url <endpoint-url> s3 ls

synchronize a bucket with a specific prefix to a local directory purging any files from the bucket/prefix that are no longer in the local directory:

[user@localhost ~]$ aws –endpoint-url <endpoint-url> s3 sync /home/user/downloads/ s3://mybucket/mydownloads/ --delete

More examples can be found here:

Optimizing Transfers

Parallel uploads can be accomplished with the AWS CLI tool to better utilize the available bandwidth and improve performance. Ideally, you'll have some understanding of the dataset so that you can divide the files into equal portions. One approach is to use the --include and --exclude options to address mutually exclusive subsets. For example, you may create separate screen sessions and run different aws commands in each:the following command will start a copy of all files in /home/user/downloads/ that start with the letter B, which will be sent to the background then start another cp of all files that don't start with "B":

[user@localhost ~]$ screen -S awscopy1 -d -m aws –endpoint-url <endpoint-url> s3 cp /home/user/downloads/ s3://mybucket/mydownloads/ --recursive --exclude "*" --include "B*"
[user@localhost ~]$ screen -S awscopy2 -d -m aws –endpoint-url <endpoint-url> s3 cp /home/user/downloads/ s3://mybucket/mydownloads/ --recursive --exclude "B*"

Another approach may be to simply sync each top level directory separately 

  • No labels