S3Proxy implements the S3 API and proxies requests, enabling several use cases:
- translation from S3 to Backblaze B2, EMC Atmos, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, and OpenStack Swift
- testing without Amazon by using the local filesystem
- extension via middlewares
- embedding into Java applications
Docker Hub hosts a Docker image and has instructions on how to run it.
Users can download releases
from GitHub. Developers can build the project by running mvn package
which
produces a binary at target/s3proxy
. S3Proxy requires Java 11 or newer to
run.
Configure S3Proxy via a properties file. An example using the local file system as the storage backend with anonymous access:
s3proxy.authorization=none
s3proxy.endpoint=http://127.0.0.1:8080
jclouds.provider=filesystem
jclouds.filesystem.basedir=/tmp/s3proxy
First create the filesystem basedir:
mkdir /tmp/s3proxy
Next run S3Proxy. Linux and Mac OS X users can run the executable jar:
chmod +x s3proxy
s3proxy --properties s3proxy.conf
Windows users must explicitly invoke java:
java -jar s3proxy --properties s3proxy.conf
Finally test by creating a bucket then listing all the buckets:
$ curl --request PUT http://localhost:8080/testbucket
$ curl http://localhost:8080/
<?xml version="1.0" ?><ListAllMyBucketsResult xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01/"><Owner><ID>75aa57f09aa0c8caeab4f8c24e99d10f8e7faeebf76c078efc7c6caea54ba06a</ID><DisplayName>[email protected]</DisplayName></Owner><Buckets><Bucket><Name>testbucket</Name><CreationDate>2015-08-05T22:16:24.000Z</CreationDate></Bucket></Buckets></ListAllMyBucketsResult>
Maven Central hosts S3Proxy artifacts and the wiki has instructions on Java use.
- atmos
- aws-s3 (Amazon-only)
- azureblob
- azureblob-sdk (newer but lacks multi-part upload, see Azure/azure-sdk-for-java#42603)
- b2
- filesystem (on-disk storage)
- google-cloud-storage
- openstack-swift
- rackspace-cloudfiles-uk and rackspace-cloudfiles-us
- s3 (all implementations)
- transient (in-memory storage)
See the wiki for examples of configurations.
S3Proxy can be configured to assign buckets to different backends with the same credentials. The configuration in the properties file is as follows:
s3proxy.bucket-locator.1=bucket
s3proxy.bucket-locator.2=another-bucket
In addition to the explicit names, glob syntax can be used to configure many buckets for a given backend.
A bucket (or a glob) cannot be assigned to multiple backends.
S3Proxy can modify its behavior based on middlewares:
- bucket aliasing
- bucket locator
- eventual consistency modeling
- large object mocking
- read-only
- regex rename blobs
- sharded backend containers
- storage class override
- user metadata replacer
S3Proxy can listen on HTTPS by setting the secure-endpoint
and configuring a keystore. You can read more about how configure S3Proxy for SSL Support in the dedicated wiki page with Docker, Kubernetes or simply Java.
S3Proxy has broad compatibility with the S3 API, however, it does not support:
- ACLs other than private and public-read
- BitTorrent hosting
- bucket logging
- bucket policies
- CORS bucket operations like getting or setting the CORS configuration for a bucket. S3Proxy only supports a static configuration (see below).
- hosting static websites
- object server-side encryption
- object tagging
- object versioning, see #74
- POST upload policies, see #73
- requester pays buckets
- select object content
S3Proxy emulates the following operations:
- copy multi-part objects, see #76
S3Proxy has basic CORS preflight and actual request/response handling. It can be configured within the properties file (and corresponding ENV variables for Docker):
s3proxy.cors-allow-origins=https://example\.com https://.+\.example\.com https://example\.cloud
s3proxy.cors-allow-methods=GET PUT
s3proxy.cors-allow-headers=Accept Content-Type
s3proxy.cors-allow-credential=true
CORS cannot be configured per bucket. s3proxy.cors-allow-all=true
will accept any origin and header.
Actual CORS requests are supported for GET, PUT, POST, HEAD and DELETE methods.
The wiki collects compatibility notes for specific storage backends.
- Apache jclouds provides storage backend support for S3Proxy
- Ceph s3-tests help maintain and improve compatibility with the S3 API
- fake-s3, gofakes3, minio, S3 ninja, and s3rver provide functionality similar to S3Proxy when using the filesystem backend
- GlacierProxy and SwiftProxy provide similar functionality for the Amazon Glacier and OpenStack Swift APIs
- s3mock - Adobe's s3 mock implementation
- sbt-s3 runs S3Proxy via the Scala Build Tool
- swift3 provides an S3 middleware for OpenStack Swift
- Zenko provide similar multi-cloud functionality
Copyright (C) 2014-2024 Andrew Gaul
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0